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Jr High...GIRLS
Well during the regular season I don't do anything sub-varsity because my schedule is full with varsity and college assignments. However I decided that I would take some fall jr. high girls games this year. I asked the assignor to put me with new officials that may need some help, which he did. I had a parocial (catholic) double header on Saturday. What a fiasco. It was the "big"game well they thought it was, partner was a no show. Another official was there watching and they asked him to help (I might have been better doing it solo) Game 1 was fine. Game 2 the "varsity" was aweful Teams were both poor, but the fans and coaches thought they were great. Gym was way to tiny (Stage is outofbounds on one side) 2 T's one on a person running on court without being called on, during a live ball. And one on visiting coach for driving me nuts. AHHH! Sorry just needed to vent to others who have been there.
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I won't generally Whack! a middle schooler for that.
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My immediate reaction to your post was, "Me neither."
But pretty quickly it turned to, "Well, why not?" It's a meaningless pre-season game at a level where the focus is, or should be, on teaching kids the fundamentals of the game. Meaningful learning involves more than just listening to instruction and doing what they are told, but in trying stuff, making mistakes, and learning from them. In the same way we come to own rules by kicking them, this girl now owns this rule. Just thinking out loud.
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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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Once, during a JrH girls game, a team was constantly taking their sweet time coming out of time outs/quarters. I used the resumption-of-play procedure, which resulted in a 5-second violation. The parents of the violating team were furious, and before I administered the ball for the other team, one parent said "you need to teach them. They're just young girls." I turned around and told him, "That's how you teach them. By enforcing the rules." |
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Going into my first season, I'm wondering how many games I have will be like this?
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Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there. - Will Rogers |
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For me, this goes into the category - I always regret the T's I didn't give more than the T's I did.
Plus I agree with the sentiment as discussed here - teaching early.....it's like uniform violations or intentional fouls - "Well, that happened last game and it wasn't called." Way to take care of bidness. (Of course, at the level you usually ref, you knew that! )
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There was the person who sent ten puns to friends, with the hope that at least one of the puns would make them laugh. No pun in ten did. |
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Girls' MS, as well as Boys' MS, often have very excited players coming off the bench for one of only a few times in a season. Running out onto the floor could well be "glee" driven as opposed to advantage driven. I can stop play without calling a technical and still live with it. All players are not equal. |
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But, to your point. I have had coaches question this before. And I've had pretty good success saying, "Coach, I would do the same thing for your kids." Most good coaches understand where you're coming from. But occasionally a coach will go off. Why? Sometimes he's frustrated, and taking it out on me. Some coaches just don't get it. Sometimes its tactical, creating a scene trying to intimidate me or to get his way by making it less painful to just give him what he wants. Note that all of these are "him issues" not "me issues". Unfortunately for him, I will not take abuse, I do not intimidate, and tantrums do not sway me. If you don't believe me, I'd be happy to provide you with references, both coaches and my children. Sure, after a game like that I may re-think my approach to future situations. I don't like pain any more than you do. My goal is to achieve a good outcome to every situation. Some days I get better results than others. But I cannot let fear of a grown adult's potentially adverse reaction to dictate how I handle situations.
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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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In the over 30 years our local kids rec league has been operating, our policy is to make the call, then explain the call (if necessary) rather than let the violation go. It is our philosophy that this is the best way for kids to learn the rules, plus it promotes consistency in the officiating. Prior to each season, we explain this to all the coaches at the annual pre-season coaches meeting. We've never heard (at least in the 17 years I've been on the Board) a persuasive argument against doing it this way.
If parents don't like it, they can join the Board and work to change it or they can put a sock in it.
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Yom HaShoah |
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One important aspect that really hasn't been explicitly addressed yet is context. As you point out, there is a very real difference between a clear cut violation in an undecided game, and a rookie mistake by one of "the scrubs" while having his moment in the sun.
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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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Thank you for contributing to my education.
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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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