Time off!

Evening all

Can’t believe it’s been nearly a month since I wrote something on here. Not good – sorry readers!

Had 2 weeks off due to wedding and then was a bit poorly last week, so was nice to get out again today. Great game – 25-44 final score and no real drama. Did feel like I hadn’t reffed for 3 weeks, but think I got away with it. Hitting the gym in the morning for a spinning session and then probably again on Tuesday.

Off for a winter break to Germany next weekend, so another week off and then back into the Championship with some nice big games in December. Got a big local derby on Boxing Day with which work wonders for my Chrimbo diet! Focus the will-power like nothing before!

All good fun at the moment. Mrs Refblog is with child once again (yippeee! 🙂 ), so got some decisions to make about the future, job is usual corporate fun and games, and Ive just sold my house. Anything gonna happen???? Jeepers – I need to stop the world for a few hours so I can breathe!

 

 

Pro player talks sense about refereeing…

Another good column by David Flatman in today’s Independent on Sunday:

David Flatman: Referee has an impossible job so let’s repair the rapport
Sun, 24 Oct 2010

There is little I find more ungraceful in sport than professionals moaning about referees. One of my favourite things to watch on television is Match of the Day but I think I might look forward to it even more were the managers’ comments left out of the programme. Alan Shearer isn’t the most eloquent of pundits but I would take him over Arsnullne Wenger every day of the week (and I am a Gooner).

I actually wonder why they do it. Perhaps the feeling of impotence, being all that way away on the touchline, with only a laptop and some chewing gum as weapons, is too much to bear. Perhaps they think it will bring solidarity to their squad, and the players will feel supported and bulletproof. In reality, I suspect it is far simpler than this; I think they just feel important enough that their opinions need to be heard and may alter the game all on their own.

Please note, I am not suggesting that any confusion or anger felt at a referee’s decision ought to be disregarded, just not blurted out during the post-match interviews.

These comments are unlikely to alter the result of the match and serve only to make the speaker look like a bad loser, grappling for excuses. I remember Prince Naseem Hamed getting completely outboxed by Marco Antonio Barrera and, instead of heaping praise on his opponent, deciding to tell the crowd he had a cold as soon as the microphone was put under his bleeding nose. In that instant he crumbled in my mind, and I took his poster off my wall.

Nobody in sport is immune to the vexation brought about by the referee. In fact, only last season I had to knock on referee Dave Pearson’s door after a match and apologise for expressing my disbelief at one or two decisions all too clearly. Fittingly, he laughed, shook my hand and told me to clear off. I did just that. And when I watched the game back on video it turned out he’d had a point too.

The odd bit of umpire heckling is a part of rugby I really enjoy. I remember very clearly the day the now-retired Tony Spreadbury called me a “cheeky bugger” for suggesting he looked a bit out of breath after only five minutes of play. I also remember, back in the late 1990s, receiving the best piece of advice ever offered by any referee as I and a rather grizzly opponent were taken aside:”You, stop putting your fingers in his mouth and you, stop biting them. Now bloody get on with it.” Those were the days, but where is that rapport now?

Rugby used to be a game where the man with the whistle was almost a man-manager. We players were referred to by name – often nicknames, in fact – and were talked to throughout the match. Yes, we were talked to like children most of the time but this served to maintain that teacher-pupil boundary, and with it the respect of the class.

These days, the referees seem to have a million more things on their plates. Rightly, they are regularly assessed by their superiors and critiqued by experts in super-slow-motion on our television screens, but their job now seems almost impossible. The breakdown and scrummage are the two areas seeming to cause the most problems over the last 18 months or so.

Rule changes must of course make matters instantly more difficult for the referees but, more than that, I wonder if referees are in fact having their own styles diluted.”Do not allow continued re-sets at scrum time,” seems to be a very current theme to which these men are directed to adhere. Well, here’s some news, not every collapse is down to one man or team actively seeking to cheat.

With all that force colliding so quickly, these things happen, so to see free-kick after free-kick and penalty after penalty does, at times, boggle the mind. Still, though, I believe these guys are doing as they are told.

The answer is to work with them, not against them. The old ABC club at Leicester were the first ones to teach me this lesson; whenever the ref came to our side of the scrum, Darren Garforth used to say:”Come on now, Flats, keep it up son, we just want to play.” Then, of course, he would hit the deck and win the decision (he might view this a bit differently, of course!).

But this work must begin before game day. Coaches and managers need to research a referee’s habits and get on the phone to him. This needn’t be manipulative, more rugby’s version of due diligence. Then, surely, this failing relationship could begin to repair itself.

The dream of match-day officials actually being welcomed into the bar afterwards might be a bit far-fetched, though. This is still sport, after all.

Source: http://m.independent.co.uk/;article=1/sport/rugby/rugby-union/

NB Not sure Peter Allan got the “soft hands” message about body language! But then again, I got told off yesterday for looking as though I was about to kill someone. To be honest, that was the message I wanted to get across!

BIg game time!

Well, I must have been a good boy of late. Got 1 v 2 next Saturday. Wonder when they calls about that will start!?!

Could be fun! And I’m really looking forward to it. Had a good week with an A League game on Monday and then a trip to the SW yesterday. Two very different games, but solid games, no drama or controversy, and happy watching people.

Trick this weekend will be to keep focused, not get dragged into anything, keep on my toes and let the players play the game they want and for them to decide what the outcomes will be.

Easy eh……

RugbyExpo podcasts

Another mailing into Refblog Towers from a commercial outfit, this time supporting the RugbyExpo coming up in November. Sadly I can’t afford to attend (ÂŁ500!) but there’s some interesting stuff on these series of podcasts following a round table they’ve done discussing on all things rugby. There are five podcasts that cover a range of issues including rugby league franchises, the Olympics, future and past innovations and the disconnect between grassroots rugby and the professional game.

The podcasts can be found here http://rugbyexpo.podbean.com

or http://www.rugbyexpo.com if you want to go to the gig.

Sometimes wish the day job was more rugby related. I joined my current employer a few weeks before they pulled out of sponsoring the Premiership (think big Swiss insurer!) Ggggrrrrr!

NB While I mention podcasts, you might also want to check out The Rugby Podcast on iTunes. Great weekly update!

IRB Appointments

November appointments are now out for the Autumn internationals.

Check them out here

Congrats to JP Doyle, Greg Garner, Wayne Barnes, Andrew Small and Dave Pearson – all oh whom feature. None for me though…..

First month in

Well, here we are nearing the end of September and we’re well into the new season.

2 Pre-season games, 2 Championship games reffed, 1 Championship game AR’d and 2 National One games reffed. What next? Who knows. Waiting on appointments but hoping for another batch of Champ games. Nothing to suggest I won’t but we just don’t know how everyone else is performing and appointments are done on form (and rightly so!)

So anything new learnt? No, not really, I stand by my last but one post. Last two NL1 games have really shown me the gap between them and the Championship. Huge! Intensity is nowhere near, crowds are nowhere near but we still have to adapt accordingly and make sure they sides still decide the outcome of these games. A 55 v 5 thriller for me this weekend left little room for controversy.

Enjoying the season so far. Hope it carries on!

WRU – Training the next generation

I realise the WRU are getting a little Henson-related kicking at the moment, but they aren’t all bonkers.

A few weeks ago, your favourite blogging ref was invited to go along to an event in Wales to raise awareness of a new scheme they are running to help train the next generation of Welsh rugby star.

Sadly, I couldn’t make it, but they sent me some vids and pics and stuff (no freebies tho!) of what I missed out on. Effectively they had some of Wales’s best rugby players under 15 all together at Ebbw Vale RFC at a gig run by Under Armour (makers of those funky training gear stuff), in association with the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU), to do some high level testing and training experiences.

The Under Armour WRU Combine Tour will travel to five towns throughout Wales – Cardiff, Ebbw Vale, Swansea, Carmarthen, and Colwyn Bay – to offer young rugby players a 360-degree approach to training and development. Not bad eh!?! Hopefully they’ll find the 6N winning team of 2015!!

Here’s a clip of Welsh international Jamie Roberts – yep he with the dodgy wrist – talking a little about what his life is and why the event was so important. Didn’t realise he was still going on with the medical training thing but some great insights.

and here’s a clip of the kids doing some of their training. Rather then than me!

Well done WRU (and Under Armour!)

2 weeks in….

… and what have I learnt?

Well that we officials are already under the spotlight (see results so far in the Championship!) and we’re having to make sure our accuracy is well near perfect!

Breakdown – The new interpretations (not laws!) certainly make life a little easier – well, at least for me as I have a pretty clear picture in my mind of what is allowed to happen, who is allowed to do what, and how I can best communicate it. This does mean that the line about us getting to the breakdown quickly is ever more important. Thank goodness for those darned PT sessions and all the hard work put in during the last few weeks .

Scrum – new engagement sequence helps. Must stay firm on the Pause. Think my analysis this week of last weekend will show a slip from the week before.  Dichotomy between what we’re supposed to do, and whether there’s any impact if they both go in early but scrummage well. I’m generally in the “leave them to it”  camp, but in the interests of consistency Im sure I need to change that pronto!

Players – don’t know if this is just early season excitedness, but Im getting a feeling of much more positivity around the park in my first few games. Makes the standout negative plays more definite to deal with and in last 2 Championship games Ive had two of the easiest Yellow Cards to dish out you’ll ever see.  One DOR was criticised for saying his player ‘took one for the team’ but I guess that’s what these pro’s do.  And helps with our new mantra of “Clear and obvious”.

Comms kit – hoorah, we have some really great new comms kit which Im liking rather a lot. We refs are on an open mic system where the ARs can hear me all the time and they press to talk when they have something for me. Pic here of one [handsome] Champ referee with the Madonna look!

So far, they’ve worked really well and from the AR feedback I’ve had, it really benefits them as they can hear me dealing with things (or not) so they know what input they need to make. They’re the same as they use in the Premiership so hopefully they’ll last OK.

Well – that’s it for me now. Some early thoughts with 2 pre-season friendlies and 2 league games under my belt. Questions anyone?

This season I will mostly….

…be wearing…

Nice eh!?! No fear of any of that ending up on ebay is there….

And so to work…

Well, here I am, full of museli (*coughs*) in a hotel lounge in the South west, ready for the season to start again. I have a pre season friendly in a ground as far as you can go in England without getting wet; between a Championship side and a Welsh regional side! Weather down here was pants yesterday and showers forecast today – frankly which suits me to a tee!

For those of you concerned, I did pass the fitness test the other week, to my relief, and between my Personal Trainer (AKA The Devil Bloke) and I, we’re feeling pretty confident that I’m making progress. Still not quite the svelte lean machine I once was but I’m getting there!)

This evening will be a strange one as it will be my first time on a pitch with a whistle this year. My local club doesn’t start for another 3 weeks or so so they aren’t really ready to do contact sessions, so hoping I can get switched back on quickly and reffing like I havent had 2 months off! Seem to remember it worked OK last year.

Bit disappointed I’m not running out at Twickenham, but while it’s a fantastic event and tournament to be involved in, there’s nothing like 15 a side rugby to warm you up. And we only have 2 weeks before the Championship kicks off again. Whatever happened to gradually getting back in September!?!

I spent last night re-watching the new interpretation’s we’re being asked to implement this year.  The main one will be around what I’m calling the ‘standing tackler’ who now has to release the player he just put on the floor, before going for the ball – “Not-quite-so-Man-on-his-feet-is-king”! Part 2 of that will be where players can enter the tackle zone from. Other main one will be a slowing down of the scrum engagement. Makes sense and I don’t think it will be much slower than last season – time will tell!

We’ve also been asked to focus on players ahead of kickers, backfoot offside, entry of attacking players into breakdown, scrum feed, and maul formation. Pretty much the same from last season.

So what do I expect from this season? More of the same really. Lots of pressure on us to deliver accuracy and uncontroversial performances. The sides will treat the Championship the same – in 2 distinct parts. The first bit where they will be looking to secure a top 8 position before the Feb cut off, and then the promotion/relegation run offs from then on. Not easy for us, but that’s not why we’re here. From what I’ve read/seen online, there’s lots been happening in the transfer market but not enough to lose the base of the sides I saw last year. It all helps in the relationships we have with players. I know them, they know me. It helps! Even though some will have different shirts on this season!

Right, I’m off for my Saturday morning hotel swim. Got to get that 3 1/2 hour journey out of my back from last night, and ready for action later. Really looking forward to it, if not the 5 hour trip home…

Hey ho – we love it!