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Does anyone know what happened to the ref that went down in today's Pittsburgh-NYJets game? And did they have a sub ready to go in for him? What's the NFL standard procedure for this?
I know NBA has a sub available for play-off games, do they for regular season games? |
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Pope Francis |
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I did not see the game this PM. What happened? |
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Rainmaker,
The last comment I heard was that they thought he'd hurt his hamstring. As for a replacement, I don't know. I think they have a replacement ready to go, but not sure about that. Anybody else know? |
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During the playoffs, the NFL has two alternates at each game. Next weekend, one of the alternates will be a referee. For the Super Bowl, there are three alternates, one of which is an alternate referee. [Edited by BktBallRef on Jan 15th, 2005 at 11:01 PM] |
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Tony, what does it mean to say the alternate is a referee? I don't understand. |
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Just as you have a referee, U1 and U2 on a basketball floor, football officials have designations as well. The referee is the official in the white hat who stands behind the offense, and gives all the signals. NFL officials work the same specific position during every game. They do not work referee one week and umpire the next week.
During the conference championship games and the Super Bowl, one of the alternates will be an official who always works as a referee. |
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Tony:
You mentioned that next week there would be 2 alternates and 1 will be a referee. Regarding this past weekend, what if the guy that went down this was the referee and neither of the alternates was a referee? Who takes over at that point, and does he wear the "white hat"?
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Never argue with an idiot. He will bring you down to his level and beat you with experience. |
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If one of the alternates is not a referee, it's previously decided who will take over as referee. He may be an alternate or he may be an offiical already on the field. He may or may not wear the white hat.
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Happened earlier in the regular season - Johnny Grier went down with an injury and Scott Green (I think?) another guy on his crew took over as referee and actually (I believe) finished the season as the referee on that crew. But he had been in line to become a referee at some point, I believe and I think he had been a referee in NFL Europe, so he was prepared to step in.
NFL guys can adjust. There's usually at least a guy or two on a seven-man crew with experience at more than one position, either coming up or in the NFL before they moved to the position they're at now (there are actually at least a couple referees who've moved to other positions, by mutual agreement after some dodginess). If somebody goes down, they can make it work. If somebody goes down in the playoffs, they have contingency plans. I wouldn't be surprised if they had RoboRefs ready to pop out of the ground if three guys went down during the Super Bowl for some reason.
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"And I'm not just some fan, I've refereed football and basketball in addition to all the baseball I've umpired. I've never made a call that horrible in my life in any sport."---Greatest. Official. Ever. |
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