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Old Fri Apr 08, 2016, 09:20pm
JRutledge JRutledge is offline
Do not give a damn!!
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: On the border
Posts: 30,540
Quote:
Originally Posted by BillyMac View Post
Several yeas ago I was selected to officiate a game involving the visiting Irish National Junior Team. I was told that both my partner, and I, were selected because we were both Irish American (our assignment commissioner at the time was also Irish American). It seemed "right" at the time, but now I wonder if that's the "American" way? Should race, national origin, religion, gender, sexual orientation, age, etc., be used in the assignment of games?
So three white guys working a game with one team all white and the other team all of a completely different race sound fair to you? Well that is the American way, because that happens all the time. And when something happens, guess what is sometimes the accusation? Why would you not hire people in officiating like the participants ever? We are not talking about major college here where everything is on video and multiple angles and scrutiny are a common place. This is often youth or high school sports where people take all kinds of bias into their positions (and I am not talking about the officials BTW).

I had a coach once ask me when he had 3 African-Americans working his game when he was at a suburban school that happened to be entirely African-American and he was playing a school from the city that was entire African-American. He asked me and my partner, "Why can I not get 3 Black officials when I am playing (Fill in a team from his conference that was clearly not like his community)?" I told him, "I really cannot answer that, we do not assign anything."

The bottom line is the American way is often having officials on games that look nothing like the actual players or top teams in sight. If that is the case, there is something very wrong. There needs to be diversity when there are diversity in the participants. Just like a business does not put a staff of people that work in a place that look nothing like or talk nothing like the people they want to gain their business. Do they put non-Spanish speaking people in communities where the entire community speaks Spanish? Nope, not unless they want someone else to get their business. Why do we accept that in what we are doing?

Peace
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Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010)