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Thanks...will do! |
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I agree with Dan.
It's not that there will be unfairness in the game if you work it; it's that there will be the specter of impropriety. Plus you don't want to be involved if an odd situation happens to arise. For example, would you have allowed a random player to turn to you after a foul call and tell you "give me a break?" Not a situation that you want to put yourself in. |
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It's not about his being able to call a fair game. It's about his being able to enjoy his daughter impressing the coaches.
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I don't think it's about him being able to call a fair game either. I think it is about him not putting himself in an awkward situation and being subject to what other people might think.
I have no doubt that he could call a fair game. And this is the statement with which I agree: Quote:
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I learned a very valuable lesson 2 years ago. My daughter who was then 13 years old was playing in a club tourney (AAU for comparison) and I was scheduled to officiate on the court she ended up playing one of the playoff games. I did not know what teams would be playing only that it was a playoff game and depending on how the round robin ended teams would be determined. Anyway, when I seen it was my daughter I cleared the issue with the coaches and away we went. It was a very entertaining game which came down to a 2 point attempt to tie the game and I call a foul, on my daughter. This put the opponents on the line to tie the game (it is important to note that they could have won had they made the initial shot). Free throws are attempted and the girl makes 1 of 2 and the game ends.
As I am signing the score sheet, my daughter walks over and says do you have more games or should I wait in the car, loud enough for some parents to hear. All of a sudden some guy is screaming from the stands that I was biased and called an unfair game which screwed his kid of a win. Yelling he is going to appeal the game and notify the tournament director. I ignored him until he started to threaten me personally. I am 6'04" and 225 lbs, I stood up and told him he had every right to talk to the administration but if he continued to threaten me then we would have to see how far he would go to back that up. (Second mistake) I get a call from assigner later asking what happened so I told him. I kept a copy of the game sheet so I could look at the foul count and summary report. Final foul count in second half was 13 - 11 in favor of the loosing team. Attempted FT's in the game was 31, made FT was 6 pts from FT's. Where was this game really lost! Anyway after all of the BS that went on I had to apologize to this team and parents, I was suspended for 1 week and rest of the season tournaments ( 1 more ). It really wasn't a big loss. All would have been ok if everyone had of just dropped it and moved on. The next year I am in a gym doing a game and what do I hear from the crowd, "This is the guy who screwed us last year, check and see if his girl is playing." Next stoppage in play I went to gym supervisor and asked to have the parent removed who said the remark. They would not do it so I left the gym myself. I got no grief from the assignor. Moral of the story, never even if you know there is a chance, officiate one of your childrens games. I don't care what sport perception is some peoples reality.
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"Your Azz is the Red Sea, My foot is Moses, and I am about to part the Red Sea all the way up to my knee!" All references/comments are intended for educational purposes. Opinions are free. Last edited by SmokeEater; Thu Jul 26, 2007 at 07:58am. |
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That last one was an interesting story.
I did share my story with another friend and he stated I was lucky everyone laughed. He asked, what would I have done had the girl on the other team or even fans had heard what my daughter said and started to make a big deal out of it...bottom line I was lucky it fell the other way. I agree...spring, summer, fall, whatever...don't do your child's game/s. Thanks for sharing... |
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Here's a story showing just the opposite. When my son played in our local rec league, he hated it when I would work his games, because he knew I wouldn't let anything go that he did. In fact, in two different years, his coaches both told me they thought other refs let some stuff of his go because they thought I might come down hard on them if they called it tight on him, since I was the ref coordinator!
All the other coaches knew that if there was a relative of a ref playing, they could request another ref, but none of them ever did of me, whether it was my son or my nephew playing, but they frequently did for other refs. I don't know if that was a compliment to my fairness, or if they were just afraid to ask me. I guess my son mellowed because eventually he coached his cousin's team and he never asked to replace me if I was working the game. And no - I never ejected him or even gave him a T. As a coach, he was an angel. ![]()
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Don't work you daughter's game. I've had to work some of my son's HS soccer games when there was a last minute injury or no other official available. Trust me, YOU CANNOT WIN AND NEITHER CAN YOUR DAUGHTER OR HER TEAM!
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