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Old Wed Jun 29, 2005, 08:17pm
ChrisSportsFan ChrisSportsFan is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by brainbrian
To be experienced means you can pick up the "flow" of the game and adjust your calls accordinly so that you're not blowing your whistle everytime and enforcing everything, but that you're able to keep games under control using other means than your whistle.

Just because you're experienced at one level doesn't mean you're experienced at all levels. There are some great high school and college refs that can come down and referee a third grade game so wisely and all the parents love him. And there are some that are experienced at the lower levels but not the upper levels and visa-versa. For example I've been told by people that I tend to "stay up" in how I officiate. I call a good high school or 7/8th grade game, but I try to apply the same rules for grade school kids and mess up their games.
O contrair Brian, I believe you might adjust your calls to mirror your partner(s) but the players have adjust to you. I we all did what you suggest, then a team could come out and handcheck all night and we'd have to adjust?
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