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Don't foul the ref!
Thirteen year old David Cranston referees during a soccer game
of 6 year olds at the Iroquois Soccer Complex in Whitby ,
Ontario
Fed up with abuse from coaches and parents, young referees and
umpires are quitting in droves, Hayley Mick reports – and
leagues are scrambling to find ways to keep and protect them
From Friday's Globe and Mail, Friday, Jun. 12, 2009
Sometimes the dirty hits were hard to spot. But Geoff Hooper, a
16-year-old hockey referee from Oshawa , Ont., always had a
clear view of the ugliness beyond the boards.
Coaches cursed at him. Parents mocked his calls. He never felt
physically threatened, but the verbal arrows stung. Often, as he
watched grown men scream like children, Mr. Hooper felt
embarrassed for them.
Eventually, Mr. Hooper decided the $25 a game he made refereeing
12-year-olds wasn't worth the trouble. So, like approximately
half of all new Canadian referees and umpires do every year, he
quit.
“Sometimes it's just not worth it to get belittled,” says Mr.
Hooper, now 20 and a student at the University of Waterloo .
Quitting has become rampant among young sports officials as
parents and coaches grow increasingly abusive at children's
games, league officials across the country say. Drop-out rates
as high as 60 per cent are creating a vicious circle: A lack of
experienced officials means kids as young as 9 are refereeing
other children. And as those junior referees and umpires are
intimidated into dropping out, fewer are rising through the
ranks to become confident and competent at the job.
“Nationally, we train just enough to keep our heads above water
and make up for the people who are leaving each year,” says Joe
Guest, director of referees for the Canadian Soccer Association.
Disturbed by the abuse and worried about shortages, a number of
youth sports leagues are attempting to reverse the trend with
programs designed to control foul-mouthed adults and support
fledgling officials.
Deborah Baic/The Globe and Mail
Breanna Spence, 14, referees six-year-olds in Whitby . About
half of all new Canadian referees and umpires quit every year
This season, the Calgary Minor Soccer Association has instituted
“field marshals” at games to protect referees as young as 12
from adult spectators who officials say are so foul-mouthed and
aggressive that two-thirds of new referees quit every year.
Softball Canada recently launched Respect My Game, a program
that includes a short statement that umpires read before every
game asking for respect from fans. And, starting this year, the
Canadian Soccer Association has ruled that all referees at
high-level games must be at least 14 years old, because it
realized kids as young as 11 were officiating such events – and
lacked the confidence to deal with conflicts on the field. “It
gives them a bit of protection,” Mr. Guest says.
Other leagues have introduced more aggressive measures,
including “silent stands” policies, which forbid spectators to
shout and cheer. In Bethesda , Md. , officials of a soccer
league banished all the parents of one team from the sidelines
for two games. The parents had to watch – some with binoculars –
from at least 90 metres away.
Officials report that most referees drop out by the time they're
16, suggesting that growing time commitments from school and
friends may make officiating – and the extra training required –
less appealing. But the main reason, many say, is in the stands.
“I've had referees on the field crying because of what some of
the parents have said to them,” says Gordon Arrowsmith, head of
referees at the Whitby Iroquois Soccer Club, east of Toronto .
“They go berserk.”
For a former Toronto police officer who has spent decades
refereeing soccer, watching adults harass his youngest recruits
is beyond frustrating. Part of his job is teaching children how
to ignore the pressure from angry adults – at least long enough
to gain the confidence and skills needed to become good
referees.
“How do you learn? You make mistakes. But some of the parents
are very unforgiving.”
Young refs say a thick skin is mandatory, especially when the
bully is at least three times your age. David Cranston, 13, has
had fun during his first three games as an official in Whitby ,
although he's heard parents mutter about his calls.
“It just doesn't bother me,” he says, although he recognizes the
situation is bound to get worse. Right now he's refereeing
six-year-old girls.
Justin Lyon, an 18-year-old hockey referee from Orangeville,
Ont., has been called countless names – even at games played by
10-year-olds. “It gets hard sometimes,” he acknowledges. “Now
that I'm older I just ignore it all.”
Others experts say more support needs to come directly from
leagues – and experienced officials. For five years, George
Smith has run a mentorship program at British Columbia 's
Richmond City Baseball Association, where he is chief umpire.
While he doesn't get a lot of financial support from the league,
he uses the only clout he has: scheduling. If the older umpires
refuse to mentor younger ones, he doesn't book them for games.
“Unless you get that type of mentorship happening,” he says,
“kids are left to flounder on their own.”
The mentoring program worked for Mike Yamaguchi. He umpired his
first game four years ago at age 9. He was nervous, but it
helped to have an older, more experienced umpire on the field to
lean on during tough calls. He also has his dad in the stands.
“You really want to jump in there, but you also understand that
he has to stand up for himself, too,” Bruce Yamaguchi says.
Now a veteran at 13, Mike is a mentor himself. He still makes
mistakes. And coaches do get in his face – although one did
apologize the next day.
The biggest deciding factor in whether a kid will continue, Mike
says, is their confidence – not their age.
“You have to have control of yourself first before you can
control other people. You don't want to have a bad self-image.”
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