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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jan 12, 2008, 06:54pm
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Kudos to the GB/SEA Crew...

Staying away from the cold weather gear... well done gentleman.

What is the worst weather anybody has ever worked in?
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  #2 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jan 12, 2008, 06:58pm
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A late October downpour. Sidelines had 6 inches of water when we finished.

I like Mike's roughing the kicker signal. An open hand instead of the closed fist for roughing the passer.
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  #3 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jan 12, 2008, 10:24pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MadCityRef
A late October downpour. Sidelines had 6 inches of water when we finished.

I like Mike's roughing the kicker signal. An open hand instead of the closed fist for roughing the passer.
I assume you mean his S38 signal for "personal foul"? I agree with you, give the signals as pictured in the book. However, I really don't know exactly what it looks like in a NFL book, but I do for NCAA and NFHS.
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Old Sun Jan 13, 2008, 10:29am
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Thumbs down

Quote:
Originally Posted by TussAgee11
Staying away from the cold weather gear... well done gentleman.
Why? What sense does it make to not use the equipment that's been made available to you? Is it supposed to be "manly?"
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Old Sun Jan 13, 2008, 01:17pm
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An open hand instead of the closed fist for roughing the passer.

What does an open fist look like? A fist is a fist.
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Old Sun Jan 13, 2008, 06:09pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BktBallRef
Why? What sense does it make to not use the equipment that's been made available to you? Is it supposed to be "manly?"
From what I've heard, it is the R's choice what to wear.

If that is true, who is anyone to question what sense was used?
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Old Sun Jan 13, 2008, 07:41pm
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Just as we can question whether the correct call was made, we can question whether it's smart not to use the equipment made available to you.
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Last edited by BktBallRef; Sun Jan 13, 2008 at 07:49pm.
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  #8 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2008, 12:30am
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Since my FB officiating took place in Southern california, I didn't encounter any really rough weather in 20 years. However, I played semi-pro in Chicago in 1949. The next-to-last game of the season was a night game in December, and it was below zero.

Bob
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Old Mon Jan 14, 2008, 09:31am
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REPLY: According to an NFL friend, it's the crew's choice as to what to wear. But depending on how dogmatic the crew chief is, it might just become the R's choice.

Two bad games I can recall: One opening game began with the temp around 75F. Right after the game started, it began to pour--I mean REALLY pour. So much so that I could barely see my partner across the field. Then the temperature began to drop so that by game's end, it was down to around 45F. And there we are soaking wet in short sleeves and (embarrassed to admit it) shorts! Other game was night before Thanksgiving. Temperature was 8F, slight breeze. But that one was made even less bearable by two 0-8 teams who couldn't get out of their own ways.
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Old Mon Jan 14, 2008, 11:21am
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My worst game was a late Oct game. The temp started just over 0, but by the end, it was sub-zero. The ground was hard as a rock. The game seemed to take forever, and was hampered, not only by one teams inordinate desire to pass nearly every down, by numerous stingers on the kids, and one bad leg injury (roughing the kicker).

After the first timeout, the trainers didn't even bother to bring us water anymore, since it was all frozen.

Despite the cold, we had some fun. At the end of halftime, we came out and hovered around one of the kerosene heaters on the field. Our U melted the tops of his shoes and had trouble keeping them on all game.
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  #11 (permalink)  
Old Mon Jan 14, 2008, 11:24am
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It just seems to me that if you're completely uncomfortable in your environment, you're going to be miserable and you're not going to able to do the best job possible. When the appropirate equipment is made available to you for a specific situation, it's stupid to not use it.
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Old Mon Jan 14, 2008, 04:06pm
RMR RMR is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TussAgee11
Staying away from the cold weather gear... well done gentleman.

What is the worst weather anybody has ever worked in?
That's an interesting question.

We are fortunate, being on South Lousiana to not have to deal with snow games, though you will get some pretty cold ones in North La. come playoff time.

The worst though had to be rain one night that was hard and horizontal and from B it was tough to see all the way to the LOS.

Of course one thing that many don't seem to be taking into consideration would be those early season games here where the temp is still in the mid 90s with 90+ humidity at kickoff. Those aren't much fun.

In 2005 we had a game moved from Friday night to Sunday afternoon as a result of Hurricane Rita and for me that had to be the all-time worst - I was a little concerned about making it through about the last 3 minutes of the first half as I could tell I was getting dehydrated and starting to feel a little lightheaded. That had to be the all time worst. The heat and humidity is bad, but with the sun beating down too - it's not much fun.
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Old Mon Jan 14, 2008, 04:33pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RMR
I was a little concerned about making it through about the last 3 minutes of the first half as I could tell I was getting dehydrated and starting to feel a little lightheaded.
An official time out to allow for a water break is not only for the benefit of the players.
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Old Wed Jan 16, 2008, 05:42pm
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An official's timeout for water is for the sake of the players?

Worst cold weather was a beautiful night in October. About 60 and we were in short sleeves. A front blows in midway through the 2nd quarter - winds of 40 mph, temp drops to about 40 and then we get hit by a downpour that actually hurt! Luckily, we all brought long sleeve shirts (crew rule) so we could change at halftime.

But hot weather is always worse than cold.
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Old Sat Jan 19, 2008, 09:51pm
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My first year it rained and rained. I was working a Frosh game they had moved to the practice field to save the V field, so we had a field with almost no grass. By halftime between the hashes from 20 to 20 was water. We needed a lifeguard after some fumbles and there were several. My knickers were blacker than the black stripes on my shirt.
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