Slarty,
the difference is - they can stop the game; good referees in professional sports are very knowledgable about the game play and they often decide to do or not to do something because they can correctly (that's an important word) assess the impact on the game.
But that's really beside the point because referee calls in professional sports are often tempered by the needs of the television camera. The first superbowl had some kind of fracas on the opening kickoff that was basically blown off because of the network's demand that the game continue.
However, I do feel there is a major difference between having the ability to stop the game and not using it, versus not having the ability to control things to that level at all.
I was not arguing that the player hit in the head should not be called under present rules - he should have been and should have gotten a penalty because he didn't check or call for a check AND continued aggressive action; it was an example of the fact that the enforcement does not bear a relationship to reality, nor do the current obvious, non-obvious distinctions.
We used to have three classes - obvious - easy, obvious - difficult and non-obvious - which I personally believe more closely mirrors the 'kinds' of hits that people take. A distinction was made because some hits require a player to 'take themselves out of the game' to check, while others do not, and because the mentality at the time said that there were some hits that players could reasonably not be aware of. I'd say that's even more true these days.
Are the refs under-trained and under-skilled - for the most part, yes. Do they need to have balls and a lack of personal entanglements that could draw their neutrality into question?: Absolutely. Is it the only problem out there? No. I think the greater problem is the rules, which have gotten out of sync with today's play. (Not that they were ever that good to begin with - even if I did write most of them.)
Chuck has that job - and more power to him. I'm satisfied to have created what is bow considered by most to be the premiere league in the country; having a little money for the effort would help, but that's the breaks.
And btw - I was never 'booted' - I resigned as Secretary at the end of the 1996 season out of protest over what I saw happening with the league.
the difference is - they can stop the game; good referees in professional sports are very knowledgable about the game play and they often decide to do or not to do something because they can correctly (that's an important word) assess the impact on the game.
But that's really beside the point because referee calls in professional sports are often tempered by the needs of the television camera. The first superbowl had some kind of fracas on the opening kickoff that was basically blown off because of the network's demand that the game continue.
However, I do feel there is a major difference between having the ability to stop the game and not using it, versus not having the ability to control things to that level at all.
I was not arguing that the player hit in the head should not be called under present rules - he should have been and should have gotten a penalty because he didn't check or call for a check AND continued aggressive action; it was an example of the fact that the enforcement does not bear a relationship to reality, nor do the current obvious, non-obvious distinctions.
We used to have three classes - obvious - easy, obvious - difficult and non-obvious - which I personally believe more closely mirrors the 'kinds' of hits that people take. A distinction was made because some hits require a player to 'take themselves out of the game' to check, while others do not, and because the mentality at the time said that there were some hits that players could reasonably not be aware of. I'd say that's even more true these days.
Are the refs under-trained and under-skilled - for the most part, yes. Do they need to have balls and a lack of personal entanglements that could draw their neutrality into question?: Absolutely. Is it the only problem out there? No. I think the greater problem is the rules, which have gotten out of sync with today's play. (Not that they were ever that good to begin with - even if I did write most of them.)
Chuck has that job - and more power to him. I'm satisfied to have created what is bow considered by most to be the premiere league in the country; having a little money for the effort would help, but that's the breaks.
And btw - I was never 'booted' - I resigned as Secretary at the end of the 1996 season out of protest over what I saw happening with the league.



tends to take a moment or two - about ten seconds I would guess, to consider being hit, look at the hit, admit to himself he's out, count to ten... cover his barrel, and then singal his elimination... no big deal right.
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