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-   -   My officials won't blow their whistle (https://forum.officiating.com/basketball/39863-my-officials-wont-blow-their-whistle.html)

Mark Padgett Mon Nov 26, 2007 12:49pm

Over the past 15+ years, I've trained quite a few HS kids to ref low level rec games starting with 3rd grade. It's my opinion that the reason they are hesitant to blow the whistle sometimes is not because they don't recognize when they should, but that they are relatively self-conscious or shy and don't want to draw attention to themselves. During training, I work on building their confidence to blow the whistle and let them know that if they make mistakes, it's not the end of the world. I tell them to work as many games as they can and try to match them with veterans for most of their first season. This seems to help a lot.

Of course, the kids who express an interest in officiating aren't usually the type who are extremely shy in the first place, thank goodness. That makes my job easier.

I tell them the more they work, the closer they will eventually get to being perfect, like me. :rolleyes:

Chess Ref Mon Nov 26, 2007 12:52pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by rainmaker
Well, seriously, of course officials shouldn't be blowing the whistle on any or all contact, but doing an exercise like this helps get them quickly through that not-blowing-the-whistle-enough stage of development. It only takes a few minutes of this for an official to learn to be unafraid of the sound of the whistle and to learn to look for contact. Then they can start to judge what to call and what not to.

When I first started I had the no whistle thingie. I was so focused on ADV/DIS that I called nothing , which made sense cause I didn't know how to apply ADV/DIS was on a BB court. Somewhere somebody told me to call ALL contact till it was painful and then I would figure out what contact was really a foul. It took me about, if I remember correctly, about 2 quarters.

I work with alot of brand new officials and just had a total new man. No rec,no adult, no nothing. I told him,in the 2nd qtr, to call all contact he saw. It seemed to help by the 4th he was calling the obvious, which was so much better than his 1st Qtr of no whistles.....

Coltdoggs Mon Nov 26, 2007 12:55pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chess Ref
When I first started I had the no whistle thingie. I was so focused on ADV/DIS that I called nothing , which made sense cause I didn't know how to apply ADV/DIS was on a BB court. Somewhere somebody told me to call ALL contact till it was painful and then I would figure out what contact was really a foul. It took me about, if I remember correctly, about 2 quarters.

I work with alot of brand new officials and just had a total new man. No rec,no adult, no nothing. I told him,in the 2nd qtr, to call all contact he saw. It seemed to help by the 4th he was calling the obvious, which was so much better than his 1st Qtr of no whistles.....

This is really pretty good advice...I guess it's easy for me to say ad/disad but I've been calling games for 7 years and understand it...I think I will use this with our new guys...Thanks Chess!

rainmaker Mon Nov 26, 2007 12:58pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chess Ref
When I first started I had the no whistle thingie. I was so focused on ADV/DIS that I called nothing , which made sense cause I didn't know how to apply ADV/DIS was on a BB court. Somewhere somebody told me to call ALL contact till it was painful and then I would figure out what contact was really a foul. It took me about, if I remember correctly, about 2 quarters.

I work with alot of brand new officials and just had a total new man. No rec,no adult, no nothing. I told him,in the 2nd qtr, to call all contact he saw. It seemed to help by the 4th he was calling the obvious, which was so much better than his 1st Qtr of no whistles.....

You mean, maybe my suggestion was a good one?? Wowee!

But seriously, a teacher/trainer will save the learners a lot of pain if they set this up in a scrimmage where the players also know what's going on, and have something to gain from it. It never hurts players to consciously work on having no contact, and it's best to do it when there's not a game on the line.

Adam Mon Nov 26, 2007 01:00pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by rainmaker
That's a little harsh. But, btw, how much pop do you drink in a day? Maybe to make the game better I"ll impose a sentence of just less total pop. You'll get the advantages to your health as well as your vocabulary.

Actually, it was an empty sentence. :)
Most days now, I don't drink any. I'm quitting, and part of the method is to force myself to drink diet when I drink pop. I'm not a fan of the diet flavor, so it helps.
I probably have one or two cans a week now. Partly to lose weight and partly to keep my heart rate down.

Chess Ref Mon Nov 26, 2007 01:38pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by rainmaker
You mean, maybe my suggestion was a good one?? Wowee!

Rainmaker, I wasn't trying to steal your thunder.:cool: I agreed with your advice but neglected to give you props.

PS does anyone know if I used props in the proper context ?

rainmaker Mon Nov 26, 2007 01:40pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Chess Ref
Rainmaker, I wasn't trying to steal your thunder.:cool: I agreed with your advice but neglected to give you props.

PS does anyone know if I used props in the proper context ?

I got not thunder for you to steal. A good idea is a good idea. But, yea, you used "props" in the proper context. Although I think it's a little passe. I know I've moved on to the much trendier "snaps". :rolleyes:

Back In The Saddle Mon Nov 26, 2007 02:12pm

I work with training a lot of new officials. I see two reasons for the lack of whistles:
  • They are in the "hey, that was a foul...somebody should have called that" stage. It takes time to be able to recognize fouls/violations as they happen and for the whistle to become automatic. They will grow out of that with some experience.
  • They are not comfortable with the result of blowing the whistle, which is that everybody stops and looks at them. Mark talked about this. Confidence building definitely helps. But so does teaching them what to do after they've blown the whistle. Most adults do just fine once they know what to do after the whistle (eliminating that uncomfortable, "Okay, now what?" feeling)
In my experience, anything that gets them to start blowing it helps. Once they've done it a few times, it begins to come a lot easier.

Juulie, I really like your suggestion. I have a training coming up in a couple of weeks and I'm going to seriously think about doing this.

Jurassic Referee Mon Nov 26, 2007 02:34pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by rainmaker
Unless there are some girls, in which case use three whistle.

Thank you.

just another ref Mon Nov 26, 2007 03:50pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snaqwells
Tell them if they don’t get their heads out of their collective azzes, you'll bring in volunteer parents.


Good luck with that one. In my experience, it is easier to get parents to volunteer to clean toilets than to officiate anything.

Mark Dexter Mon Nov 26, 2007 04:32pm

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mark Padgett
I tell them the more they work, the closer they will eventually get to being perfect or being like me.

Fixed it! :D

refnrev Mon Nov 26, 2007 11:11pm

This not blowing the whistle or not blowing it loudly is a real "kid thing." Have had the same problem with youth soccer officials for years... some as old as 17. They just won't fill the stupid thing up with air. Drive me crazy.

dblref Tue Nov 27, 2007 11:08am

Quote:

Originally Posted by rainmaker
Unless there are some girls, in which case use three whistle.

With some of my partners, I wasn't always sure if it was 3-man or 3-whistle. I did know for sure that it would be at least 1-man (me) on the 3-whistle team.:p


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