Getting Better As An Official

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Steve Furniss Coordinator of Football Officials Ohio Athletic Conference Becoming a College Football Official.
Advertisements

MASTER CLASS HIGHER PE Command Words.
Competitive Off-season 2 nd Session – February 18 U11/U12 – Individual Defending.
Competitive Off-season 3 rd Session – February 25 U11/U12 – Individual Defending.
TOUCH JUDGING: Role of a TJ Sole judge of: touch touch in goal kicks at goal.
Competitive Fall 1 st Session U11/U12 – Individual Defending.
2016 Faceoff Mechanics 2-Man & 3-Man
Sports Psychology Beginning Mental Training Believe in Yourself, Set Goals, and There’s No Mountain You Can’t Climb.
Alumni Mentor Program Student Orientation 2012
Debriefing Participants
7 Man Football Mechanics
Running and Pass Coverage
Helping Students Examine Their Reasoning
Learn all about anger and healthy ways to cope!
REFEREE 101 Dan Lewis/Abram Anaya
Law 11 Offside.
Professional Confidence and Enhancing Your Teaching Skills
The Corner Kick (17) U.S. Soccer Federation Referee Program
GETTING STARTED REMEMBER THE BOY SCOUT MOTTO: “BE PREPARED”
Classroom Skill Building
Workshop for ART mentors
MASTER CLASS HIGHER PE Command Words.
What does this mean? Why I chose this topic
Key NLP skills to enhance your professional practice
Practical touch-judging
Preparation of the Body
Minnesota Points of Emphasis
Exam Structure Exam (1 Hr 30 Minutes)
Improving your Presentations
If you have a problem at work who helps you to resolve it?
Back Judge Session July 29, 2017
Passing Game.
“It”.
Tackling and Defense Thanks to Dave Butcher for his technical support
Gulf Coast Football Officials Association Jeff McCroskey
Classroom Skill Building
WORKING WITH PLAYERS AND COACHES
Accountability Learning Targets: I can explain what accountability is.
Classroom Skill Building
San Jose Soccer Referee Association
Accountability Learning Targets: I can explain what accountability is.
Building Problem solving skills as a Young Professional
Analysing Information Collection Methods
PERFORMANCE=POTENTIAL-INTERFERENCE
WORKING WITH PLAYERS AND COACHES
Module 1: Attitude September 4, 2018.
Continuous Improvement Cycle – it never stops!
Power Session 10: Lead Conversion
GPOA Basketball Training/Philosophy
Canine Assisted Learning Lesson 4
Continuous Improvement Cycle – it never stops!
National 5 PE Command Words.
Effective Feedback.
Bulloch Information Session
WHAT KBA EXPECT FROM OUR REFEREES
Meeting #1 Week of: March 11, 2019
By : Tyauna Locklear, Ayianna Hatton, Richard Mccorkle
Helping Your Fellow Referee
Effective Feedback.
NJILOA Meetings Meeting #2
Character Strong Unit 3: Lesson 6 How to start a movement
Developing SMART Professional Development Plans
NJILOA Meetings Meeting #2
Law 11 Offside.
Efficient Penalty Enforcement Techniques
Helping Skills in Mental Health Facilitation
Professionalism and Preparing for the Game
EXCPECTATIONS OF EXCELLENCE
Great Managers —What They Know and Do
Helping Skills in Mental Health Facilitation
Presentation transcript:

Getting Better As An Official Thank you for opportunity to share some thoughts . . . Struck by irony of our location. Asked for my opinion and advice on improvement. Finally managed to write some of them down. Tried to put some logic or order to them. Regardless of your officiating experience, I hope there is something you can take away today.

The Desire to Get Better Common attribute among officials working top levels of football Willingness to continue learning and improving Requires an investment of time and sometimes sacrifice/trade-off No short cuts Something I have sensed and observed over many years in officiating. Not exclusive to football. Not content to get by on their laurels or reputation. Receptiveness to get better. Many times in officiating you are the new guy. There’s a challenge facing you. Sometimes there’s a steep learning curve. You want to work the championship game. Are you prepared to put in the work?

Become a Rules Expert Frequent study & review. Not limited to the start of the season. Understand intent and interpretation. Definitions. Engage in Discussions / Ask Questions / Forums / Study Groups Knowledge Continuum (exam, field, referee, junkie) Our job is to run/manage a football game, enforce the rules, and adjudicate the situations not covered by the rules. Collectively, we are the authority. Authorities must be knowledgeable! Ultimately, it’s about getting it right. I believe "Football talk" enhances learning. Deep down we know our own level of confidence.

Make Mechanics Second Nature Preparation Respond. Limit your thinking on the field. Mental check lists prior to the play Self-talk Mental Imagery Dedicate time well before the game for this. Three techniques that will assist you during the game.

Observe Good Role Models Select wisely Emulate what they do well. Always professional. Incorporate what works for you. (eg. Calm presence, communication) Solicit feedback from mentors. Write it down. Act upon it. Borrow from others provided it is compatible with your personality. Humour example. Rookie vs. veteran. Caution you about trying to become someone you are not.

Critical Self-Evaluation Honesty Measure judgement against standards Flexibility / Adaptability Make adjustments based on feedback. I believe this is a mindset vital to improvement. Need feedback to get better. Not always able to get this from an observer or fellow official. Flexibility is the willingness to change. Adaptability is the ease with which you make that change. Example. Positioning on an incomplete pass.

Learn From Your Mistakes Opportunity to learn Don’t allow one mistake take away from a great officiating performance Don’t repeat them Stop rationalizing / defending / making excuses Determine the type of error (positioning, judgement, understanding of a standard, communication, speed, etc.) Ben Cahoon Conditioned to view mistakes as a negative. Flip it and . . . Honesty (previous slide) Stop defending the marginal holding call that didn't need to be made. (standard) Stop rationalizing why you missed an illegal block on a kick return. (positioning) Ben - when a receiver nears the sideline keep track of him

Watch Video Best instructional tool available Picture is worth a thousand words Watch yourself in action Observe others Review specific situations (pick plays, late hits, etc.) Watch football Complement Mechanics study with this. Approach this analytically.

Video Analysis Mechanics & movement Action of keys Angles / point of view Judgement Post-play action Surprises What did I learn? Movement generally OK Gunner gets tackled. (key, standard) Missed illegal block on his side. (key) Straight lined on a difficult judgement. Need to create a different angle. Killed the play without a great view of the ball. Should have waited for FJ. Why’s 22 upset? Learning - better attention to keys.

Gain Experience Can’t rush the process. Requires patience. Any opportunity to get more reps First time vs. 100th Action slows down Be realistic about the timeline for advancement Can’t replace the value of experience. Think of your own driving experience. Think in terms of quality experience. Number of games vs. number of years. 3. Let Dave Hutton speak to advancement.