SoccerRef wrote:Anonymous wrote:Referees: You should not be manufacturing restarts anymore. You should never drop the ball to a team and tell them to play back to the other team's goal keeper. Those days are over. If you blow the whistle for an injured player and the ball s still in play, the drop ball goes to the team that last touched/possessed the ball. Period.
And if a team kicks it out for an injured player, well it's up to the other team to throw it in to team that kicked it out. It's not the referee's decision.
Parents: Remind the referees of this if you see it happening
Parents: Do not talk to the ref. If there’s a problem, let the coach deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is not a parent's job to remind the referee of anything. You are there as a spectator and cheerleader for your child's team. The referee's job to referee, not yours. Stop ruining the fun of the game for everyone.
Not true- it’s the parents responsibility to loudly remind the ref of the rules, comment on their eyesight and their obvious neutrality
Anonymous wrote:Is not a parent's job to remind the referee of anything. You are there as a spectator and cheerleader for your child's team. The referee's job to referee, not yours. Stop ruining the fun of the game for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are soccer ref courses any valuable?
Nein, they’re (as with anything in the good ol’ USA) all about $.
And reffing courses should be free why?
Anonymous wrote:Are soccer ref courses any valuable?
Nein, they’re (as with anything in the good ol’ USA) all about $.
Anonymous wrote:Referees: You should not be manufacturing restarts anymore. You should never drop the ball to a team and tell them to play back to the other team's goal keeper. Those days are over. If you blow the whistle for an injured player and the ball s still in play, the drop ball goes to the team that last touched/possessed the ball. Period.
And if a team kicks it out for an injured player, well it's up to the other team to throw it in to team that kicked it out. It's not the referee's decision.
Parents: Remind the referees of this if you see it happening
Anonymous wrote:Referees: You should not be manufacturing restarts anymore. You should never drop the ball to a team and tell them to play back to the other team's goal keeper. Those days are over. If you blow the whistle for an injured player and the ball s still in play, the drop ball goes to the team that last touched/possessed the ball. Period.
And if a team kicks it out for an injured player, well it's up to the other team to throw it in to team that kicked it out. It's not the referee's decision.
Parents: Remind the referees of this if you see it happening
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Referees: You should not be manufacturing restarts anymore. You should never drop the ball to a team and tell them to play back to the other team's goal keeper. Those days are over. If you blow the whistle for an injured player and the ball s still in play, the drop ball goes to the team that last touched/possessed the ball. Period.
And if a team kicks it out for an injured player, well it's up to the other team to throw it in to team that kicked it out. It's not the referee's decision.
Parents: Remind the referees of this if you see it happening
I was so worried about this. Now that the no more restart police are on the look out and we know it all parents telling refs how to ref games I can go back to real concerns like COVID and paying bills.
Just another parent that thinks their knowledge is superior to everyone else and must share it with everyone so we can all marvel in their intellect and benefit from their useless input.
Anonymous wrote:Referees: You should not be manufacturing restarts anymore. You should never drop the ball to a team and tell them to play back to the other team's goal keeper. Those days are over. If you blow the whistle for an injured player and the ball s still in play, the drop ball goes to the team that last touched/possessed the ball. Period.
And if a team kicks it out for an injured player, well it's up to the other team to throw it in to team that kicked it out. It's not the referee's decision.
Parents: Remind the referees of this if you see it happening