6. AXIOMS OF OFFICIATING
6.1 – Dealing with uncertainty
-
Uncertainty (or doubt) is a common and normal part of officiating.
You perhaps only see a glimpse of some action, because it is obscured by
other players, because the action happens so fast, or because it had
started to happen before your gaze was focused on it.
It is not something normally to worry about, because we have tools that
we can use to resolve uncertainty, the primary ones being communication
and principles.
-
Uncertainty
should trigger an attempt to gain more information, either by
adjusting your position and view, or by communicating with another
official.
Sometimes the actions of the players convey information about what
they
believe happened during the play, giving you additional evidence to help
you make the call.
-
It helps to be able to quantify uncertainty.
The following scale (used by the UK Government during the COVID
pandemic) defines the words to use according to how
certain/uncertain you are when communicating with colleagues:
6.2 – When in doubt principles
If you are reasonably sure of something, then go with that - it is
more likely to be correct than to fall back on the relevant "when in
doubt" principle.
However, the "when in doubt" principles reflect experience that, in
certain situations, one outcome is more common than the other.
Therefore, by going with the more common outcome, you are more likely to be
correct, but that is not guaranteed.
The principles are not there to excuse failing to apply the correct
mechanics.
Note that the principles below do
not
change when video review is available.
Given the quality of video we will most often see, it is likely that
many reviews will let "stand" the call on the field, so it is important
to make
the call on the field
as fair as possible.
When in doubt:
Pre-snap
-
offensive players are legally on the line;
-
offensive players are legally in the backfield;
-
defensive signals are legal;
-
a departing player has left the field prior to the snap;
-
a charged team timeout precedes a foul that prevents the snap;
-
the one second pause
after a shift
has been violated;
-
players are legally moving rather than in illegal motion;
Blocking
-
the back at the snap is not positioned outside the normal tackle;
-
as to disintegration of the free-blocking zone
(Rule 2-3-6)
or tackle box (Rule 2-34),
they are
§
intact;
-
a block below the waist occurred before (not after) the ball left the
tackle box
-
it is a legal block rather than clipping;
-
the contact is below the waist rather than above it
(Rule 2-3-2);
®
-
a blind-side block is legal rather than illegal;
§
-
as to a block in the back, the contact is
at or
below the waist rather than above
(Rule 2-3-4-a);
-
it is legal use of hands rather than holding or illegal use of hands;
Passing
-
the forward pass is incomplete rather than a fumble;
-
the forward pass is catchable
(Rule 2-19-4);
-
it is a fumble rather than a forward pass if the passer was hit from
their blind-side, or if you see an empty hand moving forward, otherwise
the passer has thrown the ball rather than fumbled it
(Rule 2-19-2-c);
-
the passer has not intentionally grounded the ball;
-
the pass is forward rather than backward behind the neutral zone
(Rule 2-19-2-a);
-
the pass is backward rather than forward beyond the neutral zone or when
there is no neutral zone;
-
the forward pass was thrown
or forward hand-off made
§
from in or behind rather than beyond the neutral zone;
Possession and touching
-
a catch, recovery or interception is not completed
(Rule 2-4-3-h);
-
as to whether the ball touched the ground during a catch, it did not
touch the ground;
-
on a simultaneous catch or recovery, whoever comes up with the ball
gets it;
-
it is a fumble rather than the
running play
has ended;
-
as to touching the ball, a player has not touched it
(Rule 2-11-4);
-
the ball is accidentally
touched rather than intentionally batted or kicked
(Rules 2-11-3, 2-16-1-a and 2-16-1-d);
Kicks
-
a kicking team member has (a) entered the area in front of the receiver;
(b) contacted the potential receiver before (or simultaneous with) their
first touching the ball; (c) interfered with a receiver in position to
catch the kick and who does not do so;
-
if it occurs close to the time of the kick, a foul by a Team B player
trying to get to the kicker will have previous spot enforcement; a foul
by a Team B player trying to aid the return will have postscrimmage kick
enforcement;
-
a foul by Team B on a scrimmage kick occurred after (not before) the
ball was kicked;
Ball live/dead
-
the ball is dead
(Rule 4-1-3-a);
-
the player is in bounds rather than out of bounds;
-
if the ball carrier is being held by only one player, the ball is still
alive; if held by two or more, forward progress is stopped;
-
an unsportsmanlike conduct foul occurred while the ball was dead rather
than live;
Contact and fouls
-
a player is defenseless
(Rule 2-27-14);
-
the defensive back has legally initiated contact in passing situations;
-
the face mask, chin strap or helmet opening has been grasped then twisted,
turned or pulled
(Rule 9-1-8-b);
-
the foul is roughing rather than running into the kicker
(Rule 9-1-16-a-8);
Near the end zone
-
it is a touchback rather than a safety
(Rule 8-5-1-a);
-
it is a touchback rather than a momentum exception;
-
the ball is dead in the field of play
rather than a touchdown;
-
as to whether an illegal block occurs in the end zone or field of play,
it occurs in the field of play;
-
on changes of possession in or near the end zone, the return has NOT
left the end zone;
Miscellaneous
-
call timeout for injured players;
-
the Referee should invoke Rule 3-4-3 (unfair clock
tactics) when the game clock is under 5 minutes of each half;
-
there is no foul;
-
don't throw the flag;
-
don't blow the whistle.
6.3 – Points to ponder
Always remember:
-
player safety is your number one concern after your own;
-
make the tough call;
-
don't get emotionally involved;
-
a pre-game conference is a must;
-
if you look like an official you'll perform like one;
-
count the players;
-
correct obvious errors;
-
see leather;
-
know the down and distance;
-
sell the call but don't over-officiate;
-
call what you see but see what you call;
-
don't guess - know;
-
if two officials are marking a spot, one could be doing something else;
-
let the mind digest what the eye has seen;
-
what effect does it have on the play?;
-
it's what you learn after you know it all that counts;
-
on the wings, don't get trapped inside;
-
in the defensive backfield, don't get beat deep;
-
after throwing your flag continue to officiate;
-
4th down, kill the clock;
-
take a second to take a look;
-
the three virtues of a good official are attitude, consistency and
competence;
-
the only part of officiating to
emphasise
is your signalling;
-
be decisive - indecision (or is it indecisiveness?) gives the
impression of uncertainty;
-
never stand still during an entire down - people will think you are
lazy;
-
if officials are close enough to touch each other there is generally
something wrong;
-
don't get mad and don't get even;
-
if the fans and coaches don't know your name or who worked the game,
you've had a great game;
-
it is more important to get it right than to look good;
-
don't dillydally - if you are going to get it wrong it is better to
get it wrong quickly than it is to get it wrong slowly, but it's still
better to get it right;
-
false pride has no place in officiating;
-
there are probably 5 "big" calls per game - make sure you get them
right;
-
officials can
influence
people (affect their behaviour) because they have
power
(the ability to influence someone), and
authority
(the right to exercise power), but there can be no authority without
respect for that authority,
and respect has to be earned - it does
not come automatically with the stripes;
-
if you are not
sure
it's a foul, it isn't, except against the QB;
-
if they get beat, they cheat!
-
there is no such thing as a
late
flag, only a
considered
flag;
-
ignorance can be corrected, but stubbornness
and stupidity might be
permanent;
-
getting the job done is better than doing it perfectly;
§
-
don't officiate at 100mph - you will see more if your head is steady;
§
-
it doesn't matter how fast you are moving, light will still reach your
eyes at the same speed;
§
-
you're only as good as your next call.
6.4 – Principles of effective officiating
All officials must:
-
be helpful (preventive officiating);
-
have a thorough pre-game conference;
-
be prepared to compromise;
-
avail themselves to other officials;
-
help fellow crew members as much as possible;
-
encourage less experienced officials to ask questions;
-
give advice when needed;
-
be on time;
-
know their position;
-
know that uniformity is important;
-
act in a professional manner at all times;
-
be aware of primary and secondary responsibilities;
-
be people watchers not ball watchers;
-
be clock conscious;
-
never miss a down;
-
give good signals;
-
not allow linemen to talk;
-
be in the position to make the call;
-
not turn their back to the ball;
-
blow their whistle like they mean it;
-
keep their mouth closed around the goal line;
-
keep up-to-date with the mechanics of crews smaller than you normally
work - you never know when injury or delay will force you to work that
way;
-
be able to control their sideline;
-
be able to cover situations far downfield;
-
be aware of tempo;
-
know penalty enforcements;
-
never alienate a member of their crew;
-
"make it be there" - no phantom calls;
-
"get the play right" - if there is doubt, discuss it.
6.5 – Ten tips from Sports Officials UK
-
Know the rules and rules applications and apply them accurately.
That way you will achieve the consistency that competitors need.
-
Be decisive and strong in your decision making.
Competitors will trust decisions made confidently and assertively but
not aggressively.
-
Make sure the players understand your decisions.
Then you will reduce their reasons to challenge them.
-
Don't take challenges personally.
Questioning your decision is not an attack on your integrity.
-
Watch for flashpoints.
If you see what might cause an outburst you can prevent it.
-
If you get a decision wrong, acknowledge it.
Players accept you are human - they don't trust perfection.
-
Don't try to redress injustices.
Apply the rules, and let justice take care of itself.
-
Be friendly and approachable.
Players will relate to a person more than they do to an official.
-
Give every event your best effort.
For some competitors this is the highlight of their season.
-
Enjoy your officiating.
If you don't enjoy being there, the competitors will know.
Next chapter (pregame)
Back to index
Editor: Jim Briggs, Editor, IAFOA Manual of Football Officiating
jim.briggs@acm.org
Generated: 5/3/2023, 1800