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The situation is the same. No matter the sport or level, what he did was unprofessional, IMO. |
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One of the best features of this forum...
... is the proffering of suggested smart-*** comments we so dearly wish we could utter that would just be hi-larious! But alas, they simply remain only in the cranium or uttered under the breath.
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-- #thereferee99 |
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You may be right, but it's also unprofessional for an official to play on a team and spend the evening complaining to the officials. I'm sorry, but while I would probably never use that particular tool, the bottom line for me is it worked. He was able to do it without tossing your teammate, too.
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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The fact that it "worked" does NOT justify unprofessional conduct from an official. The ends do not justify the means. Like it or not, we are held to a higher standard. To do things like this umpire did - or make the comments that Mr. Padgett likes to make - is contrary to the officials code of ethics that we all agree to abide by when we put on the uniform. and believe me, I have learned the hard way that - in the long run - these types of antics don't work. They will always come back to haunt you at some future time. |
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1. It's not what i meant to say. 2. It's what i actually did say. 3. It's unprofessional, even if I can understand the impulse. I still stand by the fact that it's more unprofessional for an official to participate in such a contest and publicly critique the umpire. The OP didn't actually admit to such, but I'm inferring it from his post. If he did not, and only allowed his teammates to engage in such behavior, then it's slightly less unprofessional so I will slighly apologize.
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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I slightly accept your slight apology
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You still didn't address my assumption directly. I'll change now, and assume that you weren't participating in chiding the official; at least on that particular play.I'm a little testy about this subject this summer due to a situation here. 1. U (2 man) makes OOB call on end line opposite table in the 2nd half, ball to the defensive team. 2. R2 (for next game) is walking along the same endline, en route to the table to watch the rest of this game. 3. Coach of offensive team complains about call, ending with "Everyone saw it but you." 4. R steps in and warns coach to cool it. 5. R2, now sitting behind the offensive bench, exclaims "that was a crappy call." 6. R calls T on coach, as the comment came just as he turned away. 7. R retracts T after finding it was the official who made the comment. While this situation was made worse by the fact that the official was wearing his stripes, in my opinion, the worst thing an official can do is bad mouth another official during a contest; especially when those around him know he's an official, regardless of the sport.
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Sprinkles are for winners. |
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Prolly so. The ump seems to have lowered himself to your level. But you seem intent on ignoring the behavior of your teammates. I wonder why that is.
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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 Last edited by BktBallRef; Tue Aug 03, 2010 at 03:30pm. |
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Hey, I can only control what I do on the field. We're all adults. We can make decisions for ourselves. If they choose to complain about a call, that's their perogative (sp?). They've never officiated anything, so we can't hold them to a higher standard.
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