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#1
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Referees and Human Players
DISCLAIMER: This post is my personal opinion, and has not been discussed with or approved by any other member of my team. This post does not necessarily represent the opinion of any or all members of my team.
We just got back from our second regional, and it was great! The referees did a marvelous job, but they were hampered in the following way: There were no referees who could see behind the driver's stations. As a result, many human players committed fouls that were not called. I can personally vouch for the fact that when I or our Human Player asked a few of the individuals concerned about the rules, all were simply unaware that they had committed a foul. So I don't think there was any malice or attempt to cheat; these all appeared to be innocent mistakes. Problems included stepping out of the driver's station tape lines; not removing balls immediately from the corral (which could affect a match); stepping over the four-foot line. The four referees on the field are busy watching the bridges, alleys, and robots, and usually cannot see behind the reflective drivers' station walls. So this is NOT a complaint against any referees. My question is, do we need six referees, so as to station one behind each drivers' station? Is this really important, or am I just being obsessive about a trivial glitch in the competition? Is it worth the increased resources, i.e. needing to arrange for two more referees at every regional? Should there be a human player meeting before every regional, like the drivers' meeting, to go over the rules? My apologies in advance if I am wasting everyone's time. |
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#2
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Re: Referees and Human Players
I've refereed 4 events this year, so I can say what has worked for me at the events I've worked at.
Normally, during qualifications we would have one referee on each side hang back and stand near the driver's station. This would be on the side that the Inbounder slot is on. They would split time between the field and the humans, usually focusing more on the humans. The one across from them would be completely focused on robots. Although this isn't perfect, it worked fairly well. During eliminations, we used a slightly different system. At events where we wer lucky enough to have two extra referees (which we had at 2 of my events) we would station one of each behind the drivers stations and they would signal fouls, allowing the other refs to focus on the field. However if there weren't the extras we used the staggered refs like in qualifiers. I know this isn't perfect, but this is just one system that seems to help keep a close eye on the human players. |
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#3
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Re: Referees and Human Players
This is no waste of time. The refs are there to enforce the rules, otherwise we'd all be keeping ever ball our human player comes in contact with. If the rules aren't being enforced, something is wrong. From what you said, the refs were being good, and doing their jobs, so it seems like it's a number problem. Maybe more referees would make things more legal.
In a game where the robots, the drivers, the coaches, AND the human players can cause fouls, there needs to be people watching them. |
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#4
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Re: Referees and Human Players
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I guess I'm ok that these penalties are not called as it doesn't really affect the matches, but it is a little unfortunate for those who do read the rules and make efforts to stay inside the box. |
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#5
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Re: Referees and Human Players
I was doing field reset at St. Louis, and saw some kind of driver station penalty in probably every other match - teams with coaches driving or throwing, grabbing the balls early (happened constantly! Eventually the refs told everyone to stop), throws from over the line, stepping out of the box, teams with 5 people in the box, and more... I tried to let the referees know about the penalties, but I guess they had other stuff to watch. If FIRST is going to make games like this one where human players can make a big difference, then maybe they should get an extra referee or two for each regional to keep an eye on them...
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#6
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Re: Referees and Human Players
Volunteer coordinators were explicitly told to have five referees and one head referee - no more, no less.
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#7
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Re: Referees and Human Players
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Incidentally, the head referee is entitled to rely upon information from sources other than referees, per [T13]. So even if an event can't station a true referee there, they could theoretically have another trusted, competent volunteer relay notice of the infractions observed. This could be useful in terms of catching coaches operating robots, or illegal human player shots. |
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#8
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Re: Referees and Human Players
This thread brings up an interesting point. At the Northville District, I witnessed a student rack up close to 27 penalty points for stepping over the line everytime he tried to throw a ball on to the field, during an elimination match.
As P.J. detailed there was a ref standing right behind him signaling to another ref to input the penalties. This poor kid had no idea he was doing anything wrong. I don't think he was aware of the line or any rules about stepping over it. I am not even sure he knows what happened now. I believe after that match his team (which I don't remember) was eliminated from the tournament. At what point, should a referee step up to a student and let them know they causing fouls? I mean we have flags and hand signals to let the drivers know when they are committing fouls. Shouldn't someone let the human players know when they are committing fouls too? |
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#9
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Re: Referees and Human Players
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IMO, a referee should not talk to students (even to advise that they are causing fouls) DURING a match. That job belongs to the coach. |
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#10
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Re: Referees and Human Players
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I did notice the refs notify the human players several times, including during matches, why they had incurred fouls. |
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#11
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Re: Referees and Human Players
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#12
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Re: Referees and Human Players
I've always worked under the assumption that I'm not supposed to try to correct people during matches, but after a match I definitely go to teams that incur a lot of penalties and tell them what they were doing wrong.
And Adam, was that the match with the line penalties or the one where the human player was wearing the coach button? Because that was another match with over 20 points in penalties. But that was a qualification match, I believe. Just another thing to check before your matches. Wear the right button please oh please. |
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#13
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Re: Referees and Human Players
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I just felt really bad for him, since he obviously wasn't taught how to inbound the ball effectively, nor was he paying any attention to the line. The ref behind him would hold his hand up in the air everytime he crossed the line and the ref at the penalty station would input the foul...but never was there an indication to the student or the alliance that multiple fouls were occurring. I agree with Richard that the responsibility is 100% on the coach to teach and correct this type of behavior, but in this instance I don't think anyone on that side of the glass knew fouls were occurring. Just seems like a flag should be raised and pointed at the offending human player or something, so we (drive team and coaches) know what's going on during the match. |
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#14
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Re: Referees and Human Players
The refs at GTR east seemed to notice the human players [me included (whoops)] step over the line and take balls during hybrid fairly often. It was so common, that if my memory serves me well, the MC specifically mentioned these 2 common fouls on friday at lunch. After that, the number of human player fouls reduced from slim to none.
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#15
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Re: Referees and Human Players
The problem is, the refs who can normally see this happen and are calling these are standing in a line pretty much parallel to the drivers, so when we do this (At least that's what I always try to do, point at the offending person that is) they don't necessarily see. The field is not idealized for reffing this year, unfortunately.
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