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FAN TOSSED: Veteran referee Jack Nies ejected a fan sitting near midcourt during the second quarter.
The man, believed to be an acquaintance of Nuggets forward Carmelo Anthony, was being verbally abusive, Nies said. "He was using a lot of profanity," Nies said. "There were a lot of young children and families sitting in the area, and it wasn't going to stop. When he left, it got very quiet." The man left without incident and was not arrested, according to a police officer providing security at the game. "I don't know those people," Anthony said after the game. I was wondering had anyone read this. I have only had to run an FAN once. 8th grade boys game. This Kids dad was out of control yelling and cursing at the players, his son and the officials. (His son was terrible by the way). He was one rows back, So I walked by and said Sir I will have to ask you to please stop the cursing there are children present. He replied with Well call the Fking game right. So I walked over to the sight Administrator and informed him that man must go. He did not disappoint, he went out yelling, kicking stuff, pointing at me. It was great. Has any one else had to toss a fan?
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Yes, I have. However, you should not have addressed the fan at all. You should have pointed him out to game management and let them handle it from the get-go.
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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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Mr. Grammer Guy says...
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You're right. At the time I thought it would be less of an issue if I asked him politely to stop. I was wrong. Your is to show possession. As in, "Is that your fruit?" In telling someone that he is correct, you need to address that person with the (pronoun?) you, as in "you are correct." Or, with the contraction, "you're right." Obligatory on-topic contribution: Yes, I have tossed fans before. The proper procedure is to have the game mgmt deal with the person(s). On occasion, I've also gave them a heads up that "if that person keeps up the attitude he's portraying right now, he will be tossed." The intent is to be preventative. So be it if game mgmt uses that info to decide to try and talk the guy down. So far, that mechanic has always worked for me. [Edited by JugglingReferee on Jan 4th, 2006 at 11:06 AM]
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Please, leave it to the pros. ![]()
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Any NCAA rules and interpretations in this post are relevant for men's games only! |
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Re: Re: Mr. Grammer Guy says...
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![]() Yeah, leave it to the pros. ![]() |
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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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...and this is why you ALWAYS find out who game management is before you take the floor, and ask them specifically where they will be during the game. |
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Had a game one night that was a district play-in game (winner won district; loser got second). Big crowd and great game. Middle of 3rd quarter, I first noticed this HUGE cop -- muscle and fitness cover material; not Rosie material. How they got this guy large enough shirts for his arms to fit in the sleeves I'll never know.
Anyway, he was positioned off the baseline within the sideline a couple of feet, as this gym didn't have any "end zone" seating. At this point, we had a play where a kid unsuccessfully tried to save a loose ball out of bounds. He went into the stands and landed in a group of people. This guy, probably in his 50s, was in the middle of the group and got in the kid's face immediately. It wasn't a crash, as everyone protected themselves and the kid eased up. I don't even think the guy was touched more than you would, like, brush someone on their shoulder in a tight hallway. The kid's instincts said to go after the guy, but as soon as I got between him, he figured out that wasn't a good idea, AND his teammates got there as well. So, I'm on my way to the table to get this fan out of there, and I look back to get a clear description of him, and this cop is taking care of it -- wihtout my asking him. So, I stop for a second to see what happens, and the cop escorts him out. I grab the ball and administer the throw in, and we play on. Between quarters, I walk up to the cop, who had repositioned himself back to where he was and said, "hey, man, thanks for the help with that fan." The guy looked at me and said, "you're my man!" I felt very secure after that! |
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"It is not enough to do your best; you must know what to do, and then do your best." - W. Edwards Deming |
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