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Referee The “Boss”

Referee The “Boss”. March, 2010. Our Agenda. Review referee roles and responsibilities Discuss Skills & Knowledge requirements for the position Discuss Key Responsibilities upon Arrival at the Pool Meet with Meet Manager Before the Start of Session Meet with Senior Officials

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Referee The “Boss”

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  1. Referee The “Boss” March, 2010

  2. Our Agenda • Review referee roles and responsibilities • Discuss Skills & Knowledge requirements for the position • Discuss Key Responsibilities upon Arrival at the Pool • Meet with Meet Manager • Before the Start of Session • Meet with Senior Officials • General Briefing of Officials • During the Session • Session wrap up • Identify next steps - Up the Ladder • Questionnaire completion & Review Vocabulary “Shall” = No option; a command “Should” = Preferred course of action “May” = Optional

  3. Overall Responsibilities • The most Senior Official on deck for the session • Not in badgelevel but in authority • Must be at least Level 3 and have taken referee clinic • Mentor and support for all officials on deck • There to ensure the competition is run fairly and smoothly • Don’t be afraid to ask for help – but ultimately all decisions are yours

  4. Skills & Competencies • A Positive attitude • Good Listening and Observation skills • Decision making ability • Sound Communication skills • Well Organization • Experienced • Ability to Keep Discipline • With dignity, authority but without arrogance • Must be Flexible • Don’t assume all meets run the same • Good use of Common Sense

  5. Knowledge of the Rules • Keep up-to-date with changes to the rules • Have a copy of the most recent rule book available – but not with you on deck • Whistle Required/Recommend is the Acme Thunderer Whistle • Not Recommend a Fox Whistle as it is Too Shrill

  6. Know the Rules … 2 FINA Swimsuit Regulations • FINA rule GR 5 addresses the use of swimsuits in competition. Two major changes in the swimsuit rules in effect on January 1, 2010 are now clearly stated in two FINA By-Laws, specifically BL 8.2 and BL 8.3 as follows: BL 8.2 In swimming competitions the competitor must wear only one swimsuit in one or two pieces. No additional items, like armbands or leg bands shall be regarded as parts of a swimsuit. BL 8.3 From January 1, 2010 swimwear for men shall not extend above the navel nor below the knee, and for women, shall not cover the neck, extend past the shoulder, nor shall extend below knee. All swimsuits shall be made from textile materials. (For Canadian meets, the rule comes into effect immediately, as per Pierre Lafontaine’s directive.)

  7. Para-Swimming (Swimmers with a Disability) Websites • www.swimming.ca/paraswimming • www.paralympic.org • www.swimalberta.ca/officials/swad-information-2.htm • swimsask.ca/programs_swad.htm

  8. On Arrival at the Pool • Arrive 1½ hours prior to start – or when requested by Meet Management • Dressed according to SNC rules (or meet rules if different) • Ensure you have whistle, rule book, pencil • Ensure your name is checked off the Officials Roster • Find Referee’s heat sheet • Find Meet Manager/Meet Referee

  9. Meet with Meet Manager … and Meet Referee if there is one • Read meet package in advance (from website) • Determine if there are any special rules … • Deck Entries, Prelims/Finals, Para-swimming, Masters? • Warm-up procedures/Life Guards? • Double ended? • Any single-length events requiring change of start or timer end? • Problems from previous sessions? • Preferences for running session and any timing considerations? • Review and approve Officials Roster • Are people assigned to be: • Runners, False Start Rope Operator, Safety Marshals

  10. The Referee Checklist is a great tool to use when doing the “walk about” of the pool deck. Found on the Swim Canada, Clinics, Referee pdf file.

  11. Before Start of the Session • Time out the session – can obtain from MM Software • Number of heats * (slowest time + turnover time) • Should not be longer than 4½ hours • Do a facilities check • Water temperature: 25 – 28°C (77 – 82.4°F) • Chlorine level: between 1 – 5 around 3 • PH level: 7.2 – 7.6 • Air temperature: Minimum 2° warmer than water • Check lane ropes, starting blocks, backstroke flags, false start rope, 15m markers • Make sure Safety Marshals are on deck and warm-up rules are posted • Check with the Technical Advisor if there are Para-swimmers, about the adaptations of the swimming rules pertaining to individual swimmers

  12. Example of Warm-up Procedures that can be laminated for posting around the pool deck and visible.

  13. This form will assist when you are checking the pool deck. It can be found in the Swimming Canada Clinics Referee PDF file.

  14. Meet the Officials Chief Finish Judge Marshalling Area Referee Assistant Chief Timer { Timers False Start Rope { Timers Turn Judges { Timers { Timers Backstroke Flags Backstroke Flags { Timers Clerk of Course { Timers Chief Timekeeper Judge of Stroke Starter Recorder/Scorer Electronics

  15. Meet with Senior Officials • Clerk of Course … Do first • Starter • Chief Finish Judge • Chief Timekeeper • Electronics • Office (Recorder/Scorer) • Objective of the discussions: • Are they able to do the job ? • Agreement on their responsibilities – specific to this session

  16. Meet with Clerk of Course • Agree on the time to marshal the first event • Do they have enough help – marshals? • Number of heats behind blocks • Marshalling announcements • Procedures for: • Scratch Rules as per Meet Package, Deck entries (Spare Cards), Relay Cards, … • Combining/Re-seeding heats and events • Events with 1 heat (6-8 swimmers) go straight to Finals? • Special Procedures for Finals • What and Who to inform of changes to program • # swimmers/heat, # heats/event, combined events • Referee, Electronics, Chief Timekeeper, Chief Finish Judge and Starter

  17. Meet with Starter • Starting over top? • Discuss watch check • Discuss signals • Discuss false-start DQs • Any other functions you want from starter • Relay takeovers, turn judge, sweeps • Has equipment been checked? • Discuss announcements to be made by starter

  18. Meet with Chief Finish Judge • Re-confirm method of calculating official times • Manual vs. electronic • Confirm process flow for: • Cards and/or tape to table • Official times to recorder/scorer • Make sure they communicate with the office • Verification of Posted Results • Notify Referee of swim-offs for Finals • Communicate with Chief Timekeeper if problems with times • Inform Referee of any other problems • Lost times, getting behind ….

  19. Meet with Chief Timekeeper • Checkout watches to Timers • Review experience level & matching of Timers • Identify Head Lane Timers • Recruit Timers if necessary • Arrange a watch check • Take each heat winners time • Do briefing for Timers if asked by Referee • Single-length/Distance Events, Official Splits • Monitor recorded times to catch glaring errors

  20. Meet with Electronics • Do they have any concerns or problems? • Equipment, people etc. • Have they arranged for a pad check? • How much “change” can they handle? • Do you need to wait until the board goes to zero? • Signals

  21. Meet with Office • Do they have any concerns or problems? • Equipment, people, etc. • Have they talked to Chief Finish Judge? • Have they talked to Electronics? • Procedure for Posting Results

  22. Briefing of Officials (Referee may delegate some of this to other officials) • Decide whether to separate officials for briefings • At the briefing: • Welcome officials and thank them for volunteering • Introduce key officials including yourself • Give officials an estimated completion time • Tell officials what time they should be on deck • Identify all Strokes & Turns Officials • Enough? Qualified? In the room? • Conduct briefings for Timers, Strokes and Turns

  23. This PDF document will assist you in your Referee briefing. Found on the Swim Ontario, Officials folder main page.

  24. Briefing - Strokes & Turns • Review areas of jurisdiction for Strokes vs Turns • Identify number of lanes per judge • Pair novices with experienced officials • Judges can rotate during session • Reinforce guidelines for observing a turn • It’s OK to seek a second opinion • Review all strokes for session • Not a clinic – cover the salient points • Para-swimming – cover any differences for clarification • Masters Rules – cover any differences for clarification • Relay Takeovers – do not indicate DQ until race has ended

  25. Briefing - Strokes & Turns … 2 • Inform the officials of the DQ procedures • Only call it if you’re sure • Wait till last lap, ensure station covered, try to inform swimmer, fill out DQ slip/card, bring card to Referee • Referee can overturn a DQ – Judge should not take offence • Remind the officials of procedures for disputes • Refer swimmers to their coach • Refer coaches to the Referee

  26. Briefing - Timers(May be done by Chief Timekeeper) • Verify watches and/or plungers • Check that everyone has timed before • If not, ask Chief Timekeeper to conduct 101 after briefing • Ask Head Lane Timers to identify themselves • Decide roles for each timer in a lane • Cover procedures for: • Swimmer verification, • Go by the Flash not the Sound • Where to stand to take times, official splits • Place to record times on cards, light touches • When to clear watches • Bell or single length events • Place to record time on cards/lane sheet, light touches

  27. Starting the Session • Session can begin when: • The pool has been cleared • Clerk of Course followed instructions – swimmers are ready to swim • Officials are in place • Watch check has been completed

  28. During the Session • Be visible to officials and swimmers • Observe that officials are performing their duties • Mentor if necessary • Rearrange officials if experience is lacking • Keep the session moving at a steady pace • Use a “Gopher” if necessary • Watch for the “unexpected”

  29. During the Session … 2 • When making a decision • Deal with the facts • Use all available evidence –time cards, sweeps • Hear all sides of the story • Feel free to consult fellow officials • Mark time on your heat sheet at end of each event • Do a sweep at finish of each heat • Not mandatory but comes highly recommended • Communicate, Communicate, Communicate • Officials, Coaches, Swimmers

  30. During the Session - Starts • Request quiet for each Start • Visually check pool and officials • Mark heat sheet with missing lanes & number of swimmers • Do long whistle for swimmers to get on blocks or in water • Whistle with authority • Use 2nd whistle for backstroke • Swimmer position • One foot at the front of the block; backstroke in water at wall • When swimmers are settled, hand over to Starter by raising arm down the pool • Maintain raised arm until start is complete • You can stop the start at any time • After the Start, watch that all swimmers have re-surfaced

  31. During the Session … DQs • Ensure all details are completed – discuss with official • Ensure the following are notified of a DQ: • Swimmer or Coach • Chief Finish Judge • Note all DQs on your heat sheet • Remember the Referee may disqualify any swimmer from their own observations

  32. During the Session – DQs …cont’d “DECISION OF FACT” • The following needs to be present to have a “Decision of Fact” • The official responsible has been assigned to that position • The official is in the correct position and is qualified • The DQ is filled in and recorded correctly • The Referee is satisfied that all of the above are correct

  33. From the SO website in the forms folder you will find this one page Wording for DQ. Recommend that this be laminated and on all clip boards for consistency.

  34. Here is an “Infraction Report” that can be used for DQ’s This one can be found in the Swimming Canada Clinics folder in the Referee PDF File

  35. During the Session - Protests • STAY CALM • Verbal • Within 15 minutes of the end of the event • Try to settle verbally or advise protestor to submit a written protest • Written • Within 30 minutes of end of the Event • Record time of receipt and give to Meet Manager • Wait for Jury of Appeal decision • Arranged by Meet Manager • Odd number of people 3 or 5

  36. This form can be used for a Protest. Found in the Swim Canada Website, Clinics in the Referee PDF folder.

  37. During the Session - “Swim-Offs” • Referee arranges for “Swim-Offs” • 1 hour or more after all involved swimmers have completed their heat • Coaches may agree on a different time that is less than one hour after all involved swimmers have completed their heat. • Use meet management to assist

  38. During the Session - Official Splits • Coach requests it by completing time card and giving to Clerk of Course • Clerk of Course notifies Referee and Chief Timekeeper • Referee/Chief Timekeeper ensures 3 Timers for swim • Completed card goes to office

  39. End of Session • Walk around the pool (during the last few heats) and thank all officials • Check with the office for any problems • Be available for de-briefing session • Leave your heat sheet with meet management • Proof all DQ’s • Check results

  40. Level V Level IV Level III Level II Level I Up the Ladder • Get experience • Get a copy of the official DQ terminology • Create your own “cheat sheet” • Get Peer reviews

  41. Level I Level I • Attendance and successful completion of this clinic • 2 satisfactory deck evaluations

  42. Level II Level II • Certified Level I • Completion of clinics and 2 deck evaluations in any 2 positions except Referee, one of which must be Strokes and Turns • Clerk of CourseChief TimerChief Finish Judge/ Chief Judge Electronics (1 signature must be CFJ)Stroke & Turn Judge/ Head Lane Timer (2 signatures)StarterMeet Manager

  43. Level III Level III • Certified Level II • Completion of all clinics and 2 deck evaluations in any 3 remaining positions • Referee can not be used until level lll has been attained • Conduct a Level I clinic

  44. Up the Ladder Level V Level IV • Levels IV and V • require … • additional clinics • intensive evaluation • National Meet experience • and much more. Level III Level II Level I

  45. Useful WEB sites • www.swimontario.com • www.swimming.ca • www.fina.org • https://www.swimming.ca/Paraswimming • http://www.mastersswimmingontario.ca/ • http://mymsc.ca/

  46. Referee QuestionnaireReview 30 minutes

  47. Referee - Questionnaire 1. After you arrive at the pool to work as a referee, you should: • Meet with the Meet Manager to discuss details of the session • Check with the Electronics operator to ensure the automatic placing and timing system is working properly • Check pool equipment (lane markers, starting blocks, etc.) • Ensure that the pool temperature is within limits • Ensure that pool chemistry is within limits • Ensure teams are in assigned areas on the deck • Check officials’ assignments • Meet with the major officials as well as the meet manager to discuss pertinent information

  48. Referee - Questionnaire 2. Final authority to approve the assignments of all officials and to ensure that they are adequately briefed prior to a session lies with the: • Chief Timekeeper • Chief Finish Judge • Meet Manager • Referee

  49. Referee - Questionnaire 3. The following officials shall be responsible for assigning duties to officials within their jurisdiction: • Chief Timekeeper • Chief Finish Judge • Meet Manager • Referee • Judge of Strokes, Inspector of Turns • Clerk of Course

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