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England Hockey 1 PRESENTATION TO CANDIDATE UMPIRES LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD
30

LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

Dec 30, 2015

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LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD. PRESENTATION TO CANDIDATE UMPIRES. OUR UMPIRING STRUCTURE. LEVEL ONE – club/county LEVEL TWO – county/region LEVEL THREE – national programme. PRESENTATION. LOOK LIKE AN UMPIRE Be smart Use whistle tone Make your signals clear Don’t be officious - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

England Hockey

1

PRESENTATION TO CANDIDATE UMPIRES

LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

Page 2: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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2

OUR UMPIRING STRUCTURE

LEVEL ONE – club/county

LEVEL TWO – county/region

LEVEL THREE – national programme

Page 3: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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PRESENTATION

LOOK LIKE AN UMPIRE Be smart Use whistle tone Make your signals clear Don’t be officious Don’t be scared to smile

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EQUIPMENT

Umpires equipment

Players equipment

GK’s equipment

Page 5: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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THE PITCH

Dimensions

Lines & markings

Shooting circles

Goals and flags

Page 6: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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PREPARATION

PRE-MATCH CHAT- establishing consistency- work as a team

PITCH INSPECTION - goals, nets, lines

WARM-UP

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AREAS OF RESPONSIBILITY

Shooting circles, side lines

Play approaching

Eye contact

When to blow the whistle

Page 8: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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POSITIONING & MOBILITY

MOVING WITH PLAY (& reading the play) - forwards, backwards, sideways

SET-PIECE POSITIONING - penalty corners - corners - strokes

Page 9: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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THE GAME RULES

TEAMS - substitutions - GK on the pitch

CAPTAINS - responsibilities

Duration of the Game

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STARTING & RE-STARTING THE GAME

Centre pass

Ball over the side-line

Ball over the back-line - by an attacker, by a defender- intentionally, unintentionally

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SIGNALS

Clear and held for long enough

Confident

As per the book…don’t make up your own!

Page 12: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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THE BULLY When / why do you award a bully?

Where is it taken?

What distance the other players?

One touch only – not three!

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SCORING A GOAL

Off an attacking players stick in the shooting circle

Completely over the goal-line

Goal awarded in a penalty stroke situation

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ACCIDENTS & INJURY

When to stop / not stop time Assessing an injury Treatment on the pitch The bleeding player Re-starting the game The injured umpire…what to

do!

Page 15: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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CONDUCT OF PLAY

PLAYERS SHALL NOT…

- use of stick and playing equipment

- use of body, hands, feet

- the raised ball (the good, the bad and the ugly – dangerous!)

Page 16: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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OBSTRUCTION

Onus is on the tackler

Consider: - position- intention- timing

Shielding the ball with the stick

Page 17: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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PLAYERS MAY NOT…

MANUFACTURE AN OFFENCE

- examples?

TIME WASTE- examples?

Page 18: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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GOALKEEPERS MAY…

Inside the circle…

Outside the circle…

Lying on the ball - obstructing

Page 19: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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ADVANTAGE

A penalty shall be awarded ONLY when

a player or team has been clearly disadvantaged by an opponent’s offence

Why signal it & who are you signalling it for?

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FREE HIT

Awarded for an offence by an attacker in the opponents 23

Awarded following any offence by any player between the two 23’s

Awarded for an unintentional offence by the defence outside their circle and

within their 23

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PENALTY CORNER Intentional offence by a defender outside the circle

but within the 23 metres area they are defending

An offence by a defender in the circle which doesn’t prevent a probable goal

Intentionally playing ball over own back-line

Intentional offence in the circle by a defender against an opponent who does not have possession of the ball or an opportunity to play the ball

When the ball becomes lodged in a players clothing or equipment while in the circle they are defending

Page 22: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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PENALTY CORNER cont…

Managing the Penalty Corner Where are the players positioned? Where are you? Where is your colleague? First hit shot & height restriction Danger…what is it? Ball beyond 5 metres of shooting

circle

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PENALTY STROKEAwarded for:

- Offence by a defender in the circle that prevents the probable scoring of a goal.

- Intentional offence in circle by a defender against an opponent who has possession of the ball or an opportunity to play the ball.

- For defenders persistently crossing over the back-line before permitted before the taking of a PC.

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PENALTY STROKE cont…

TAKING a Penalty Stroke

- time stopped- position of players & GK- position of umpires- after the whistle

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PENALTY STROKE cont…

ENDING a Penalty Stroke- goal scored or awarded- ball caught by GK- ball lodged in GK’s

equipment- ball passes outside of circle- ball comes to rest in circle- taker breaches a Rule

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PENALTY STROKE cont…

RE-STARTING after the stroke

- goal centre pass

- no goal a push or hit to defence at top of circle, opposite centre of goal-line

Page 27: LEVEL 1 UMPIRE AWARD

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PERSONAL PENALTIES

Players including substitutes may be cautioned, warned or suspended

Intentional offences must be punished

Verbal abuse – deal with it promptly

Upgrading a penalty and reversing a decision

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USE OF CARDS

What does each card represent?

The general principles to apply

Same colour…different offences

Duration of suspension for minor offence versus duration for more physical or serious offences

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DEVELOPING YOURSELF

Practice, practice, practice

Watch other umpires

Get someone to video you

Talk with players and coaches

Always be prepared to listen

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AND FINALLY…

Help raise the standard of the game

Ensure every game is played in the right spirit

Make sure you are suitably insured

Work at your fitness

Enjoy your umpiring!