I believe in personal and corporate responsibility. The facts are that yes our society has become lawsuit happy, people will sue at the drop of a hat and they will drop the hat! I do think we have to look at the tournament organizers viewpoint for at least a second. Because litigation is rampant and no one can predict what a judge or jury will decide the tournament organizers are faced with this scenario: Imagine that there is a forecast for "possible" severe weather the day of the event. The organizers decide they don't want to take a chance (maybe their motivation is really safety or maybe it is financial liability or maybe both) and cancel the event. The weather forecast is wrong (imagine that!) and now all the participants are mad as you know what. Second outcome: The organizers say, we have these signed waivers and it is only "possible" severe weather. They hold the event and the worst happens. A titantic storm hits right in the middle of the event. You have lots of people out on the water. You have someone get struck by lightning or a boat gets capsized and someone drowns. Now you have grieving loved ones of those people who are hurting and mad as you know what. They don't care that a waiver was signed, they hold the event organizer responsible for terrible decision making. They get a high powered attorney and sue the event organizers and win millions. This can and does happen. I'm not saying it is right but I am saying it is what it is. Now I have never entered a big time tournament that costs a lot of money to enter (I am nowhere near a good enough fisherman and I'm too cheap to pay the big bucks fee) so I don't know how it works. It seems there should be an agreed amount of refund if the event is cancelled, after all the event organizers costs should be somewhat less. It doesn't seem fair that the anglers carry all the risk for a legitimate cancellation. This is an interesting subject, thanks Rusty for your post.