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I think in this situation you should report your side of the story to your AD. Also if you have a video tape of the game let them watch it and let the address the issue. You are not going to help solve the problem by making phone calls yourself for the same reasons you didnÂ’t want that official working that game, youÂ’re attached to a school and are personally involved in the situation.
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There's a lot that goes into getting booed! |
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Here (IL), if the box is not marked, it's not used. If it's not already on the floor, game management can put one down using tape. If game management doesn't want to do it (reference the "home team doesn't want on, but the visitors do" discussion above), the visitors can apply a box to their side. |
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Nate |
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"...as cool as the other side of the pillow." - Stuart Scott "You should never be proud of doing the right thing." - Dean Smith |
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A few years back we had an away game and one of the officials for the JV girls contest was a teacher from our school.
I'm in the stands opposite the benches with the varsity coaches and early in the first quaterter, the teacher-ref gives our JV coach a T and then a second one right after signaling the first one. So the varsity staff had to go down and coach two games that night. I think something was said to our assignor, as the teacher-ref was still given games in our conference, but never against us.
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"Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible." – Dalai Lama The center of attention as the lead & trail. – me Games officiated: 525 Basketball · 76 Softball · 16 Baseball |
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Ideally, there probably would never be an occasion for an official to work any level game involving the school system that employs her/him. But, since we do not live in an ideal world, we must accept that there are less than ideal situations. Setting aside the problems that face schools and assignors, what should *our* approach as officials be?
I'd like to suggest the following: 1. Never, under any circumstances (any? well, I can't think of any), accept an assignment to work a varsity game involving your employing school district. 2. Never accept an assignment to work a sub-varsity game involving your employing school district unless the coaches and/or ADs of both schools agree. For example, the day of the game your school's AD gets a cancellation call from an official and the AD is scrambling to find a substitute for the Freshman/JV double header. You might tell the AD to keep looking, but if s/he truly cannot find someone else, you'll pinch hit as long as the head coaches for each game agree. Disclose the conflict to the coaches and ask if they want you to work the game. They'll agree ... the other choice is to have a single official work the games. Having first agreed to it, they cannot later complain about it. (Well, they can complain, but the complaint ought not to go very far.) The fact that you are disclosing the issue and dealing with it in a transparent way will (or should) remove any question about there being a "homer" motive. For what it is worth, it sounds to me like the problem described in the original post is a problem that would repeat itself in games not involving that particular official's school.... |
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TASO (Texas) has very rigid guidelines regarding this. You may not officiate any game at the school you teach at, but also not officiate any game for your entire School District if you or your spouse works in that District. That prohibition exists for 5 years after you or your spouse leaves the district.
You may also not officiate any games at a school if you have a child enrolled there. This crosses over to all sports, not just the sport your child may be involved in. Joel |
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