You Suck, Ref!


I am watching a bout at the 2011 WFTDA East Region Playoffs. From my high vantage point, I can see the front pack ref blow call after call. “You are freaking HORRIBLE,” I roar. Another jam, another bad 20-foot call, this one issued at about 17 feet (as opposed to the previous jam, when he issued it at around 31 feet). He is maybe getting some of the interior, chippy stuff right that I can’t see from up high, but…blaarggh, another bad call. I am seething. “You suck, ref.”

Full disclosure: the ref I’m berating is actually myself. I am reviewing DVD footage of bouts I worked, in search of ways to improve after what I know was not my best weekend. The bird’s eye view from the camera well is giving me plenty to think about. As I watch myself repeatedly screw the bed or shit the pooch or whatever, I’m reminded abundantly of what I’ve known all along: officiating modern roller derby is hard.

As I am refereeing each of this year’s Big 5 tournaments, this thought has reared its head often of late. In fact, at Easterns I went out for lunch with two other experienced, highly decorated refs. One of them, a friend who is not at all prone to hyperbole, proposed that modern roller derby may be the most difficult sport in the world to referee.

It’s a metaphysical debate, I suppose; like trying to sanely argue that a polar bear could beat up a tiger or that it’s harder to play the oboe than the French horn. (What, you never had that debate? Loser.) Few of us have ever officiated another sport at a high level, or even a low level, and we probably never will. All the same, my friend backed up his statement with some indisputable facts that derby crews face. Let’s scroll through a few of the big ones.

1. The worst seat in the house

Friends often tell me I have “the best seat in the house.” Right. A fan booing me from the stands can see most of the track without turning his irate, reddening face. I can see a small patch of the track, and my eyes must zoom in and out on the skaters who occupy it. I often must look away to other patches of track or to make eye contact with another official. There is no panoramic perspective, and something is always happening in a direction that you’re not looking.

2. Relativity

Other sports rely on distances, typically fixed and demarcated by hash marks, blue lines, bases, three-point lines, and so on. Distances are rarely relative, with a few exceptions like off-sides in soccer. In derby? A referee, in motion, might be trying to reasonably judge that a player in motion is less than 20 feet in front of another player in motion who is less than 10 feet in front of another player in motion who is less than 10 feet in front of a cluster of players who are all in motion. Just writing that made me throw up a little in the back of my mouth.

3. The show must go on

Baseball plods and football marches, one play at a time. Free-flowing sports like hockey, soccer or basketball come to a halt when an infraction occurs. At that point, a single official reports the violation to everyone watching. In derby, however, refs keep the game moving while typhoons of penalties pelt the NSOs from every direction. Jams are rarely called for penalties, but a misfire in penalty communication can stop a bout in its tracks and eat away at the patience of a fan base. Officials take this responsibility very, very seriously.
(Fun aside: Every league should have a hot dog company sponsor their bouts, so that during long ref huddles, the announcer could say, “This sausage-fest is brought to you by…”)

4. Information overload

Fortunately we work in teams of up to seven refs and perhaps a dozen or more NSOs—bright, dedicated, and exceptionally talented people, instantly processing massive amounts of information. Our jobs require mind-reading and precise communication, and one loose thread can make it unravel. At tournaments, we often team with officials we just met a few hours earlier. When it works, it’s an amazing feeling. When it doesn’t work, it’s obvious to the whole building.

5. Rapid evolution

The modern game is young, and changing before our eyes. Many of the tactics that you sneaky rollergirls use to outwit your opponents are, by definition, very hard to officiate. The combinations of strategy, speed, athleticism, ferocity and sheer randomness that you put on the floor are growing more limitless by the minute, if that makes any sense. We have no option but to adapt as quickly as you do.

Add a few other key elements (skating ability, potential for injury, reams of tribal knowledge not found in the rule book, etc.), and we certainly have a unique and formidable challenge before us.
“Modern roller derby is the most difficult sport to officiate” is a statement that probably cannot be tested. Still, it is worth thinking about. Not as an appeal for sympathy, nor as an appeal to change the system, nor as leverage when disputing a questionable call. It encourages, I hope, an honest and fair reckoning of what officials have decided to take on in lieu of sitting in the stands.

The inherent difficulty certainly doesn’t make us any less accountable for working our asses off to be as good as we are able. The sport we love, and the players that we so respect and admire, deserve at least that much.

Back on my television screen, the little image of me whirrs around the track, watching a blocker chase a jammer toward the front of the engagement zone. The little me cranes his neck around and raises the “out of play” warning hand, like a scythe. I hit “pause”…the little frozen people are about 15 feet in front of the pack.

You suck, ref.

Perhaps. But I guess it’s all relative.


Comments

was gonna say after reading the opener to get some stripes on and have a go yourself, don't beat yourself up too much as long as you are impartial, try your best, admit where you went wrong and try to improve you will have the respect you deserve

You rock, ref.

Curtis is one of the most consistent refs in the sport today (as evidenced by his execution through the tournaments thus far.) The man has no ego that supercedes any effort to do the best job he can for the skaters.

Thanks for setting a high bar for others to aspire to, Curtis.

And not just this article! You do a great job and are certainly one of the most consistently good refs I've had the pleasure to work with!

"...perhaps a dozen or more NSOs—bright, dedicated, and exceptionally talented people, instantly processing massive amounts of information."

On behalf of the NSO community: Thank You!

I love derby. I don't like all the calls I see, but I know that the zebras are working very hard out there. Derby is impossible without all of the refs and NSOs.
My thanks to all of them.

But the whole derby world is in Love with those Frames!
Love Ya Curtis! Great job at Easterns and Besterns!

Best post EVAH.

I have almost been tossed from bouts for berating the refs (albeit in the 1st season or two) but after 7 seasons of derby I have come to calm place about refs...it is a hard job, and since I can't do it I have no place to judge. Some of my favorite derby peronalities are refs, and NSO's so I've come to terms so to speak.

Keep up the good work ladies and gentlemen, the derby nation needs you, even if we don't like you!!

Having grown up in sports my whole life, playing, coaching and refing. I came into the derby community in early 2007 and I have see the sport grow tremendously. With rapid growth came constant strategies, causing more pressure to be put on the refs to handle these strategy changes. This sport is hard to ref and it's only getting harder, so we as a derby community should start reversing the trend the other direction, starting with a no minors rule set. This will significantly help the refs focus on what’s important (majors) and all the other many reasons others have listed in other articles.
Also, as a coach I think we as a derby community need to give the refs a little more slack. Many players and fans try to hold their refs to unattainable standards. Watch how many calls are made wrong in professional sports, there a more than you would think and those refs are getting paid and have been reffing that sport their whole adult life. So feel free to give them a hard time during the bout, but pat them on the back and buy them a drink once the final whistle has blown.
To all the refs, thank you for your hard work and dedication!
-Coach Pain Newton

I posted a diatribe about Central's on my facebook, and very quickly took it down after some very good back and forth discussion with a former Ref who I deeply respect. There were some blatant miscues, miscalls or what not, but you know what.. Its derby and there will always be things that even 14 eyes on the track aren't going to see that THOUSANDS watching from a stationary point will. Breathe, cut yourself some slack and learn and grow... I keep telling myself the same thing hoping one day I'll get it right.
FWIW Curtis, you are one of my heros ;-)

Terrific article, and well done!

I think we all go into this knowing we may not always be the most favorite body on the track.. it's just nice every once and a while to hear we got a call or two right.

Keep up the great work, as a writer and a ref! This one you definitely called spot on!

Curtis, the fact that you take the time to do personal video review is above and beyond what many modern roller derby refs do. That fact in and of itself speaks to your passion and dedication to the sport.

Fun coincidence, Referee Magazine recently ran an article where referees from various sports argued as to why their sport was the most difficult to officiate. I think we'd give hockey a run for its money.

Thank you. Best of luck and confidence at North Centrals this weekend.

Gia de los Muertos
Enforcer
LA Derby Dolls

Hey Curtis, great piece.

Here's a few other reasons why one could argue it's the hardest sport in the world to officiate:

- None of us grew up watching this flat track sport. Basketball addicts get 10 or 20 years of watching charges and double dribbles before they have to call one. Derby refs get about 6 months, if they're lucky. The senior-most flat track derby refs in the entire universe all boast well fewer than 10 years watching this sport.

- Alphanumeric uniform numbers with more than two digits.

- Audio and communication challenges. It's loud in a lot of sports, but how many sports rely, mid-play, on one ref communicating something specific to another, without stoppage of play, with huge dramatic impact on what happens next? (i.e., "she went out, no cut," OR, "that was a major forearm, not a cut"). That stuff happens in some other sports (baseball has a few odd examples, like the infield fly rule), but I'd argue not nearly as frequently. And with sub-par audio systems and crowds cheering and music blaring and announcers yammering, er, narrating...

- Full contact permitted by all ten players. All the time. Hockey is a full contact sport, but there's at most only a couple of people who can legally be initiating contact with impact at any given time, and they're usually near the puck. (Don't correct me if I'm wrong on this -- but hockey does have an 'interference' rule, which, if applied to derby, would make it laughably simpler to ref.) In derby, there's a potential for ten impacts and engagements to judge, simultaneously -- and just seven pairs of eyes to do it. Okay, in football there's 22 people who have to be watched while they legally engage, that's probably damned hard as well. But at least [American] football refs get to announce what they saw between plays.

- Management. Speaking strictly about the WFTDA here, there's a management / certification / training management structure which does some great things, but it's really only come into its own in the last couple of years. It's inherently not nearly as mature a the referee management structure enjoyed by NFL or MLB refs. The ideal management-approved path to a 20-year career as an adulated ref just hasn't been blazed yet.

- An epically bad call in [American] football can cost 7 or even 14 points out of, oh, 50 or 60 per game. A bad call in derby can cost 20 or 25 points out of, oh, about 220 per bout. Oh, wait, I guess we're even on that one.

and, on the flip side, why is reffing derby easier?

- No shady characters are approaching derby refs in dark alleys and asking them to shave points. At least not yet.

/reffing since 2004 and still learning stuff with every game

more then enough said!

Reminds me of a joke from my field, law. Not a very funny joke, but a good lesson:

"A law professor, an appellate judge and a criminal trial judge are duck hunting. In the blind, the three place a friendly wager on who will bag the first mallard. When a bird finally flies by, the law professor turns to a textbook, matches one source against another and finds a helpful illustration, but by the time he makes his decision, the bird has flown away.

Another bird comes into view and the appellate judge steps forward. After checking pertinent cases, decisions and precedents, the appellate judge takes aim, but again the bird is gone.

When a third bird crosses overhead, the trial judge slides between the other two, raises his shotgun and blows the winged creature clear out of the sky. "I hope to hell that was a duck," he says. "

Sometimes, all you can do is make the call and hope you were right.

I was in Indy and saw you reffing some games. I honestly think that this year's NC Playoffs had the best and most consistent officiating of any bout or tourney I have seen.

I have reffed/umped for baseball, softball, football, basketball, and even indoor soccer. Since I can't skate, however, never for derby. I am inclined to agree with your view that no sport is tougher to officiate. Hockey is close, as officials have to cover more area and dodge pucks flying at up to 100 mph, plus follow an object in addition to the participants. Umping home plate for baseball is also very difficult. The job involves tracking 70-95 mph pitches with movement and determining if they were in the strike zone at the time they crossed a space a number of feet in front of you, while also watching for even the slightest contact with a bat or hitter by the ball, judging fair and foul calls down both lines, watching for the slightest twitch by a pitcher to call a balk, and out/safe calls at the plate.

In my experience, the easiest sport to ref is definitely football. There are so many officials on the field (not to mention replay officials at some levels), and each of us has a specific area of the field, player(s), or type of infraction to watch.

In any event, kudos to you and the other volunteer officials (skating and non-skating) who work so diligently to get it right and improve your craft!