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Old Thu Feb 07, 2008, 09:24am
prosec34 prosec34 is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 33
I've been in it for four years now, with last year being my first on the varsity field.

I can tell you without a doubt the most important thing you can learn now, in order to move up, is to master the mechanics of the job. You can know all the rules you want, but the veterans judge you by whether you look like you belong on the field. That means knowing all the little nit-picky stuff, like what you have to do when there's a fumble on your side of the field, what your duty is when a measurement is performed, etc. The NFHS official's manual should be your bible, so to speak, but understand that your association may vary from that standard.

But, I'd study the heck out of that and at least familiarize yourself with the rules. And then I'd work every single scrimmage that was available to me. And never turn down an assignment. Be eager to hear sage advice, and become buddies with a few mentors.
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