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I want to add my two cents. If we go to another official with an "I think", we might as well just quit right there. We aren't doing anything to get the call right.
However, if we can go to an official and say, "I am 100% certain of what I saw, what did you see?" then we should go to the calling official and let him change his call if he wants. I'm not changing it for him but I am giving him information to allow the calling official to change it. I do believe that we should "get it right" but only when we can offer 100% assurance of what we saw. And yes, I've seen NFL crews do this on occasion. |
REPLY: I mentioned in an earlier post how to handle it (Hochuli's method). If either official isn't 100% sure of his call, he's out and the other guy's call stands. Frankly, if he isn't 100% sure, he shouldn't have made a call (positive or negative) in the first place. If both are sure of what they saw, then the R needs to arbitrate. Consider where each official was relative to the call in question (position, angle, distance, moving or standing still), and go with the guy who you feel was in the better position to see the whole play.
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postgame
Everyone talks about how important it is to have a good pregame and I agree 100%. But it is equally as important to have a good postgame. This is a great topic for a postgame discussion. Postgame discussion works really well if it can be constructive and not get too personal but if ego gets in the way as it can you may have a few problems to work out. You always have to keep in the back of your mind that it is all in the angle. Sometimes the person who has to make the call does not always have the best angle. If your crew is tight, getting together for a litlle discussion will probably work. But on a mixed crew with a wide range of experience or ego problems it will not always go as smooth as we would like.
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OR a better way to ask, "What happens if it is the R with whom you disagree?" |
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Good question Mike.
I was thinking the same thing. So if I call a Roughing the Passer call, why should I listen to my partner that saw something different? Am I supposed to agree with him if he shares a different philosophy as to when we have RTP? What about RTK or R into the K? What about holding calls? Am I supposed to pick up my flag because my partner shares a different philosophy than I do? Should I tell my partner his holding call did not affect the play? What are the disagreements suppose to be about? Philosophy or what we saw as well?
See how far we can take this. Peace |
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Peace |
This is the real issue.
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Peace |
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As far as your personal opinion of your wing man's abilities, I really think you need to get past that. It doesn't make him automatically wrong if the two of you disagree. |
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REPLY: That's my point. If it was an official whom you knew well and respected, there probably would have been much more acceptance to giving and receiving constructive criticism and honest disagreement.
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evaluator
Unless you have an evaluator that actually knows how to observe and be constructive about the job you do, it will be up to the crew themselves to evaluate their performance. If you can't sit down as a crew and visit about the game and your crew's performance you have a problem. Put your ego in your back pocket with your flag and have a discussion about anything that may have come up during the game. If you can't participate in the postgame without getting everyone mad at you then I'm afraid the problem is with you not the rest of your crew. One call does not make an official, one game does not make an official. Put the call behind you and get ready for the next call which is the important one. If your problems are chronic with the same official then yes you do have a problem and how you handle it will depend on your personality.
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bjudge, you just knocked the sails out of your argument entirely. Respect or not, once you walk on the field, you should respect your partners' ability to make calls in their zones. Otherwise, you have chaos. Perhaps he doesn't respect you either ... where would it end? Get past it, and call the game TOGETHER. If you readily admit that you would not be questioning the call if you respected him more, then you are also admitting the possibility that YOU didn't see it as well as you proclaim to have seen it. In essence, you are telling us, "I am positive I was right, and he was wrong ... except that if I trusted this guy more, maybe I didn't see it that well after all." Hypocrisy, wouldn't you agree?
Rut - he DID have a good question: Why do we weight the opinion of one official threw a flag automatically heavier than that of an official who didn't. I tried to answer that, and invite your response as well. |
Sad but true!
It is sad but true that there are some very ambitious people out there that would love to take somebody else down if they thought it might improve their own lot. Confidence is a great asset in officiating but ego is best left off of any crew.
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