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First Fight and Ejection
Without going into the gory details, after all this time, we had a fight in the first 1/2 of my game tonight. Happened right in front of my P and he ejected her. The other person didn't retaliate. Just one punch.
I feel horrible about it and although we called 29 fouls in the first half alone I can't help but feel we didn't do enough. I was always told coming up, if there's a fight in your game, it's because you missed something. I am really bothered by this and know I won't sleep well tonight. |
I think that mindset is wrong. Sometimes, sh1t happens.
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"I was always told coming up, if there's a fight in your game, it's because you missed something."
I totally disagree. I'm sure you did your best and it would have happened to whomever the officials were. |
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Was this your game that was the big blowout last season? Process the game, and let it go. |
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As an iron-clad rule that covers all cases and makes you feel bad, not so much. Like any other rule of thumb, it has exceptions. Your task now is to reflect on anything you might have missed (probably nothing if you called 29 fouls in the half) that might have prevented it. If a careful game evaluation turns up nothing, let it go: sometimes it has nothing to do with the game (player just had heart broken, flunked a grade, found out Santa doesn't exist, etc.). |
It isn't always "our fault". Poor sportsmanship has been taken to a new level this year. We had 2 booted for fighting last night in the JV game. Long rebound. Clumsy collision. One kid takes a swing and his opposite number retaliates. Look at all of the vitriol during this past year's campaign. Civility and sportsmanship have taken it on the chin.
We had a hard intentional foul in the varsity game last night by the team that lost 96-60. One of my partners advised the coach about the player losing control. His response was that "we let it get that way". This is the same coach I had the problem with on the OOB violation last week. When your butt is getting kicked all over the gym and you don't even request a timeout, it surely is not the officials' "fault." As an aside, his team was shooting a T and I asked which player was shooting. I told me and another player was lined up. I confirmed it with the coach and the other player reluctantly left. He(the player who left) then proceeded to get T'd up by one of my partners for a string of F-bombs. Tell me again coach about who doesn't have control. |
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Sometimes we see "chippy" play and we tighten up the game and we can keep things from escalating.
However sometimes things happen quickly and without warning and we're left to deal with the consequences. We're officiating games for children, older ones perhaps, but still children with varying levels of emotional maturity and some with issues we never know about when we step on the floor. We can't always anticipate their actions. While I can understand the reflection and the sleepless night I don't think you can blame yourself and I certainly don't believe what you were once told regarding that if there is a fight you missed something. |
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We had several off-ball fouls (mostly holds), several overly physical box-puts on rebounds, and two illegal screens I can recall. In hind sight, this is really a good area to analyze. |
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Not that this directly applies to your game. Just a theory I've been working on that others might likely consider all too obvious. On the other hand, our 51 foul hackfest a couple of weeks ago did not fit this mold. They just kept fouling and we just kept calling 'em. Off-ball surveillance was good. |
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Personally, I have only had ONE fight in my 20+ years of officiating...my very first Varsity game. Yes, I reviewed the tape...we DEFINETLY missed something. |
First fight..
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29 fouls is not enough. (Just joking) My partner and I called 42 fouls in first half last week in a boys JV game. Among the 42, there were a few intentional. Don't feel horrible. S#%^ happens |
With girls, there may be absolutely no warning. The one that got punched could have wronged the other one sometime in softball last summer or even at the beach. I like the advice you've gotten so far. Carefully evaluate but don't lose sleep over this. You can't always stop bad things from happening.
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