Old School |
Sun Sep 16, 2007 11:50am |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cleefy
I was umpiring a Under 10 girls grand final, (under fiba rules), and I called a blocking foul on a girl, for stepping sideways, into the dribbler, with her legs wider then her shoulders (cylinder principal). At which point, the girls Mother, and two brothers start screaming down my throat. A few curse words were thrown in, before the big, 'bomb' in my opinion. The mother stood up, and said "She wasn't even moving, and her legs weren't that wide, get your eyes checked, you silly old sod". At this point, I blew my fox mini, and teched the bench of that team - although I hadn't given a previous warning. At my association, we are allowed to tech spectators for disputing decisions.
I'm after your opinion on the matter,
Thanks. Cleefy.
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Cleefy, after reading all of the replies here. I find it amazing that no one has mentioned this. You called a block and you stood around to listen to all this from a fan. What might help you in the future is to put the ball back in play, and continue on with the game. That way, you moved down the court away from the fan and hopefully you can't hear what the fan is saying. You made a correct block call, put the ball back in play. Fans can yap, yap, yap, all they want, it's not going to change anything.
By moving the game along, they will eventually get over it because something else will happen and they are on to something else. The key here to me is to let the fan dig their own grave by establishing a pattern. If, after several trips up and down the court fan A is still having issues. This person is going to be a problem for your game and you will need to deal with them, as in any problem person/player in your game.
What has already been stated here is the best, and to add to it. When you start talking about giving a T to the team. If the fan is directly behind the bench, then you can go to the coach and warn them that this fan is about to get you a T. Then the coach can address it. However, if the fan is across the court on other side, the coach or team may have no knowledge of what's going on or plead stupid. Then you will need to deal with the fan. One more thing, that was bad advice to go try to embarrass a mother or fan like what the one post suggested. Never engage in this type of response. One reason is parents maybe new to this (10th grade girls) and they will need to learn just like at one point in time we as officials where new to this. Give that great personally of yours a chance to remedy the problem before you start ejecting people out the gym. That's enough, follow by a stop sign hand signal, works great for me. If the mom runs thru that stop sign, you have now proof that you tried to deal with it and now she can deal with her issues outside this gym because she's not watching the rest of this game.
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