One of the primary criticisms of the two ref system has been that one end of the ice gets called one way, the other end of the ice gets called another. I may have missed whether or not this imperfection has been discussed during the current exchange on this subject. At the UConn tournament three weeks ago, I noticed something that I had not seen before. The refs were changing ends at every whistle -- presumably to counter any unintended biases. Is that now standard procedure these days -- and if so, for how long, and how do we all feel about the effects of doing it that way? I think that this method may well be criticized on the issue of consistency, if for no other reason, despite the fact that it is well-intentioned. On one shift a player drills an opponent in front of the ref and there is no call (for whatever). Next time: the same player, same type of check, two minutes (for steps or whatever). No consistency, level of player frustration rises, etc., etc., etc. -- Dick Tuthill HOCKEY-L is for discussion of college ice hockey; send information to [log in to unmask], The College Hockey Information List.