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CSOA Clinic 2012 Lessons Learned
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CSOA Clinic 2012 Lessons Learned

Feb 23, 2016

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CSOA Clinic 2012 Lessons Learned. Officials . Officials at an interscholastic athletic event are participants in the educational development of high school students . As such, they must exercise a high level of self-discipline, independence, and responsibility. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

CSOA Clinic 2012Lessons Learned

Page 2: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Officials • Officials at an interscholastic athletic event are participants in the educational development of

high school students. As such, they must exercise a high level of self-discipline, independence, and responsibility.

•  Officials shall master both the rules of the game and the mechanics necessary to enforce the rules and shall exercise authority in an impartial, firm, and controlled manner.

• Officials shall work with each other in an constructive and cooperative manner. • Officials shall uphold the honor and dignity of the profession in all interaction with student-

athletes, coaches, athletic directors, school administrators, colleagues, and the public.• Officials shall prepare themselves both physically and mentally, shall dress neatly and

appropriately, and shall comport themselves in a manner consistent with the high standards of the profession. 

• Officials shall be punctual and professional in the fulfillment of all contractual obligations.• Officials shall remain mindful that their conduct influences the respect that the student-

athletes, coaches, and the public hold for the profession.• Officials shall while enforcing the rules of play, remain aware of the inherent risk of injury that

competition poses to student-athletes. Where appropriate, they shall inform event management of conditions or situations that appear unreasonably hazardous.

• Officials shall take reasonable steps to educate themselves in the recognition of emergency conditions that might arise during the course of competition.

Player Safety is our number one responsibility

Page 3: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Injury

You are not a medical professional

Page 4: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Referee Positioning

Be in position to make the right call, but not in the play itself

Page 5: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Advantage or Not?

Make sure the advantage takes place

Page 6: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

AR Positioning Critical

AR must be in position and provide assistance to the Referee

Page 7: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

AR Positioning Critical

Stay with second to last defender – get the call right!

Page 8: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Ceremonial Restarts

  Watch for quick restart; communicate with players;  set the wall;  position for restart; whistle the restart;  DONOT turn back on players or ball

Page 9: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Fair or Foul

Watch for players attacking the ball through a vulnerable player

Page 10: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Referee Positioning

Positioning is critical to sell the call!

Page 11: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Recovering from a Bad Call• Premise - Referees are constantly under intense scrutiny and 

required to make hundreds of split-second decisions in a match

• BLUF – Once and a while you “kick” one• Remedy

– Fix It – Rules allow fix (prior to restart dead ball); admit it– Spin It – Reorient your focus; better mechanics/positioning– Forget It – Dwelling during match will cause loss of focus– Confront It – Talk to other officials; tape; understand what happened– Prevent It – Review rules; active training to improve 

mechanics/positioning– Get Perspective on It – One call does not loose game

Kicking a call makes you like every other official – How you respond to the mistake sets you apart!

Page 12: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

Controlling the Match• Control vs. Chaos “let them play”

– Fine line between control and chaos– Factors impacting match control

• “History” between schools• Date of game in season/team records• Size of pitch

– Be consistent from outset • Call fouls for control/prevent retaliation• Easier to loosen the reins than bring them back in• Use coaches and captains to assist in player control• ARs assist Referee with off-the-ball or behind the back fouls/misconduct• Critical foul areas – benches, keepers, sliding tackles, high boots, grabbing/holding• Use cards to cause changes in behavior• Deal with problems before they become a major issue

– Have a plan if a fight occurs• Keep players on bench• Get numbers• Get coaches/administrator involved• Do not get in the middle of an altercation – observe and record

Page 13: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

When is Enough - EnoughDrawing the line

• Best way to answer criticism may be not to answer at all!

• Be prepared but not predisposed – What is the impact of the dissent on the pitch?– What is impact on the other coach?– What is the impact on the fans?

• Keep your cool – don’t be flamboyant– Demonstrate poise and maintain your dignity

Let the coach/player cook their own goose!

Page 14: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

You need to know when to hold them and when to fold them, but the bottom line is you need to get something for your cards

Page 15: CSOA Clinic  2012 Lessons Learned

We can aspire to be the best, but need to know who we are