HOCKEY-L Archives

- Hockey-L - The College Hockey Discussion List

Hockey-L@LISTS.MAINE.EDU

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
"Fulton, Jeff" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Fulton, Jeff
Date:
Thu, 29 Feb 1996 15:52:00 EST
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (74 lines)
For all you people who are bashing referees this week, read the following
you might appreciate the referees job much more!!!!
 
LET'S TAKE A LOOK AT A COLLEGE HOCKEY REFEREE
 
Let's take a look at the College Hockey official who is alleged to be
responsible for the inability of players to score goals and teams to win
games. He is the living
barrier who mysteriously transforms victory to defeat. What are his
qualifications and is there anything to be said in his defense?
 
In the first place, the IDEAL referee must be an apt student, who is letter
perfect in the laws of hockey and their interpretation. Unlike judges in our
courts, he must see the crime, identify the offense and hand out the
sentence
 - not later in the day, tomorrow or next month, but all within seconds.
 
Next, the IDEAL referee must be a good skater and physically sound. A player
can get frequent relief but officials must be on the ice for the entire
game.
Moreover, hockey officials are expected to act as peace officers and prevent
crime by restraining angry players who are intent upon  beating up  their
opponents.
 
An IDEAL referee, and there is no such person, should have the speed of a
sprinter, the endurance of a marathoner, the tact of a diplomat, the mind of
a professor and the unruffled demeanor of a supreme court judge. It would
also help if he had 20-20 vision and was stone deaf.
 
Fans, players, coaches and management alike expect too much of officials.
Few
players ever think their sentence was deserved; coaches shriek in anguish at
a borderline off-side call; and fans view with alarm every decision that
goes
against their favorites. Yet contrastingly, a judge has his judgment
appealed
and his decision repealed without loss of prestige. No less than perfection
is expected from the versatile hockey official.
 
It is an old but valid argument that referees don t make the rules; are
merely agents charged with the responsibility of enforcing the laws as
provided by the rule book. The fact that players trip, charge, spear, or
highstick is not the referee s fault any more than a police officer is
responsible for the actions of offenders who break society s laws.
 
Few men are so constituted that they can suffer silently while they are
publicly criticized. While it is unlikely that hockey s governing bodies
will
do much to ease the referee s life while the sport is enjoying a prolific
boom, it does seem that there should be less official criticism of referees
and linesman.
 
For instance, it isn t fair to second guess them with slow motion film. The
man on the ice has to call the play instantly; he can t wait for the crowd
to
tell him and he can t see what goes on behind his back. Neither can he
ponder
over border line incidents in his private chambers or delay a decision
momentarily while awaiting the instant replay. He just has to do the best he
can based on his years of experience. He doesn t expect to be popular; but
he
has a right to be recognized as the representative of the law makers and to
be spared from public humiliation and criticism from those who are
themselves
involved in the development of the sport.
 
Certainly, hockey cannot exist without officials; so we had better learn to
live with them and, who knows, we might even learn to like them.
 
JRF
 
HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey;  send information to
[log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.

ATOM RSS1 RSS2