Thread: New Rule
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Old Fri Aug 03, 2007, 01:13pm
Ref in PA Ref in PA is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Beaver, PA
Posts: 481
Quote:
Originally Posted by Old School
I respectfully disagree with you again. It is never irrelevant to doing what is right. I don't care where you are or what you are doing, it is never irrelevant. I remember being with guys that wanted to rob a liquor store. Sure I could have took the money and did whatever we wanted to do at the time. However, my belief in what is right and what is not is very strong and I refuse to take part in it. It is never irrelevant, never.
Your version of "right" may be different than my version of right. Therefore, there must be some standard to go by - and there is. The rule book as it is currently written is that standard. We may disagree with a rule as it is written, but we are obligated to know and enforce the rules as written. Here we discuss what a rule interpretation may actually mean, and yes we get different opinions, but in most cases the rules are clear and the interpretation thereof is also clear. When that is known we must call the game that way. To not adhere to the rule book just because you feel something else is "right" is poor advice. That is what leads to inconsistency from game to game and drives coaches and players nuts.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Old School
This is where you are wrong and your need to condemn me has taken over your inability to see the truth. The truth is, how can i deviate from a rule I never knew. I assume I was doing the right thing. I did not learn specifically until this thread. When in doubt, and not sure what to do, I call on my judgment and fair play to help me make a decision. Albeit, it was wrong, in a situation like this, what would you do?

Motive is never irrelevant Snaqs. For example, the motives of the others on this forum to burn a cross in my front yard is very significant. It shows what type of officials they really are. Being a good official requires more than just getting a rule right at the right time.
Exactly! You condem and deride the ref that knows the rules. To be a good official requires more than just knowing rules. But you can never be a good official without a good knowledge of the rules. You can have the best court presence in the world but still be considered a crappy ref if you don't know the rules.

This environment is for questions about rules and their interpretations. The forum has no sway with any rule making committee that I know of. There are some who participate here who have provided input to some members of the NFHS committee, but that does not mean the forum has any power of suggestion to that committee.

Contrary to what you believe, your disagreements with rules do not add to the discussion. You become like a fanboy, whining about things you think are wrong and things you dislike. I have read the rulebook several times. To me the rules make sense and are logical. There are a couple of points that seem ambiguously worded to me, but that does not invalidate my obligation to know the rules and call the game according to that standard. As a patched official, I MUST know the rules, I MUST keep current on the changes, my study of the rules MUST be ongoing. I lose respect for those officials who are unwilling to do this, who fake their way through games on inadequate rules knowledge.
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Last edited by Ref in PA; Fri Aug 03, 2007 at 01:16pm.
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