1vol8
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they are fast and you have less than a second to decide all of this
I agree with you for the most part but when the referees are making $h!t up as they go, to negate one teams momentum, that is where I draw the line. Let’s say, a soccer team is on the attack, a fast break if you will, no one was offsides, 3 players are barreling down the field on the offensive and the only thing between them is one defender and the keeper, is it ok for a “soccer referee” to step in, stop play for no apparent reason, let the defense get set and then start play with a drop ball?[VIDEO=]
I agree. To me, the problem is that the players so fast and so quick. that to catch most things needs the replay cameras and that goes for ANY major sport. As for transparency, no sport that i know of is very transparent about the ups and downs of an officials career outside of the English premier league. The NFL wishes they had the money involved in that league.
[/VIDEO]
All that I'm saying is that the vetting of officials in the higher end of a sport is extreme. And i believe that your attachment to the Vols has clouded YOUR judgment. That there is incompetence in officiating, cheating is rare. As for homerism, I DO wonder why officials from the home teams area are allowed to ref there.
After reading most of the trashing that the refs got at the bama game, I have something to say to you guys who are sh$% talking. You think its easy? YOU try it. I've been a soccer referee since 2003 and it wasn't until the last few years that I feel that I "get it". Officiating ANY sport at other than the Pee wee level takes years of dedication, study, and practice. Once boys get to the junior high age, they are fast and you have less than a second to decide all of this; fair or foul, if foul, then what kind of foul, and did the fouled team lose a promising play ( yes, advantage IS called in football, just not out loud like in soccer. Remember, you are also usually RUNNING when this is taking place. At the higher level of the game, referees are vetted thoroughly before they are even considered for selection, and once chosen, it is easy to get the boot, and nigh on impossible to come back once that happens. The refs do tons of tape study and are debriefed by mentors after every game, every decision gone over. Now, as for former players becoming officials, U.S. soccer had a special fast track for former pros to be officials but they called it off because they found that the players tended to THINK like a player and not like a ref, and they are very, very, different mind sets. Being a "homer" would be immediately noticed by the staff, and your career would end that day. In any sport. The fastest way for a player or coach, or fan to get tossed out from any game i officiate is to accuse me of being a cheater. Face it folks, the call may be bad, but the intent was anything but.
No. It is not. That was ridiculous. I'll tell you what, you want changes, start an email campaign to your state representative as regards this issue. These are , for the most part, state sanctioned colleges and fall under the purview of the legislature. You clearly have grounds and a legitimate gripe.I agree with you for the most part but when the referees are making $h!t up as they go, to negate one teams momentum, that is where I draw the line. Let’s say, a soccer team is on the attack, a fast break if you will, no one was offsides, 3 players are barreling down the field on the offensive and the only thing between them is one defender and the keeper, is it ok for a “soccer referee” to step in, stop play for no apparent reason, let the defense get set and then start play with a drop ball?
GBO!!
I can't speak for football but i can say thT one of the first things that we are taught is that we cannot read the minds of the players. We can only judg their actions and their results.That was a lot of words that avoided answering the question. I like how you pivoted, made an attempt to discredit me, and then followed all that up with a little back tracking. Are you a politician?
How can you make judgment on their intent if you do not know them nor work for their employer? Simply saying I'm in the same line of work is not a factual way to qualify your judgement.
Are you seriously sticking with this ( I'm in the same line of work) as your reasoning as to how you can verify their intent?
I feel that is a good rule to follow, however, this past saturdays game was a lot like a basketball game being officiated. There were a lot of “anticipation” fouls at extremely crucial, momentum swinging, points in the game. It started out fairly clean and then it was like “someone” had an oh $h!t moment, and said wait a minute, these guys aren’t going away like they were supposed to, do something about it.I can't speak for football but i can say thT one of the first things that we are taught is that we cannot read the minds of the players. We can only judg their actions and their results.
After reading most of the trashing that the refs got at the bama game, I have something to say to you guys who are sh$% talking. You think its easy? YOU try it. I've been a soccer referee since 2003 and it wasn't until the last few years that I feel that I "get it". Officiating ANY sport at other than the Pee wee level takes years of dedication, study, and practice. Once boys get to the junior high age, they are fast and you have less than a second to decide all of this; fair or foul, if foul, then what kind of foul, and did the fouled team lose a promising play ( yes, advantage IS called in football, just not out loud like in soccer. Remember, you are also usually RUNNING when this is taking place. At the higher level of the game, referees are vetted thoroughly before they are even considered for selection, and once chosen, it is easy to get the boot, and nigh on impossible to come back once that happens. The refs do tons of tape study and are debriefed by mentors after every game, every decision gone over. Now, as for former players becoming officials, U.S. soccer had a special fast track for former pros to be officials but they called it off because they found that the players tended to THINK like a player and not like a ref, and they are very, very, different mind sets. Being a "homer" would be immediately noticed by the staff, and your career would end that day. In any sport. The fastest way for a player or coach, or fan to get tossed out from any game i officiate is to accuse me of being a cheater. Face it folks, the call may be bad, but the intent was anything but.
I agree completely. I myself wonder if the NCAA is having a problem with coming up with competent officials. The NFL is having that problem right now. There seems to be no clear path towards becoming a high level official in college football.It's a tough job, do they get a free pass? No way. Just like any other job, refs should be evaluated on their performance. If they do a poor job, they need to be appropriately disciplined.
I can't speak for football but i can say thT one of the first things that we are taught is that we cannot read the minds of the players. We can only judg their actions and their results.
Judgement calls like unsportsmanlike conduct or roughness are what we're really talking about and have nothing to do with the speed of the game.After reading most of the trashing that the refs got at the bama game, I have something to say to you guys who are sh$% talking. You think its easy? YOU try it. I've been a soccer referee since 2003 and it wasn't until the last few years that I feel that I "get it". Officiating ANY sport at other than the Pee wee level takes years of dedication, study, and practice. Once boys get to the junior high age, they are fast and you have less than a second to decide all of this; fair or foul, if foul, then what kind of foul, and did the fouled team lose a promising play ( yes, advantage IS called in football, just not out loud like in soccer. Remember, you are also usually RUNNING when this is taking place. At the higher level of the game, referees are vetted thoroughly before they are even considered for selection, and once chosen, it is easy to get the boot, and nigh on impossible to come back once that happens. The refs do tons of tape study and are debriefed by mentors after every game, every decision gone over. Now, as for former players becoming officials, U.S. soccer had a special fast track for former pros to be officials but they called it off because they found that the players tended to THINK like a player and not like a ref, and they are very, very, different mind sets. Being a "homer" would be immediately noticed by the staff, and your career would end that day. In any sport. The fastest way for a player or coach, or fan to get tossed out from any game i officiate is to accuse me of being a cheater. Face it folks, the call may be bad, but the intent was anything but.