The Michigan Daily-Friday, march 24, 1978-Page 1 THE SPORTING VIEWS Student referees... . . . abused by their peers By GARY KICINSKI 'M SURE YOU'VE HEARD all the cliches about sports officiating. Things like "a referee's job is a thankless task," or "referees never get a home game." \, Both of those cliches may be true, and the public is likely to be inundated with many more like them in the near future, judging from the recent con- troveries in professional sports where officials have come under fire. You know the incidents I'm talking about-Rob Lytle's "non-fumble" in the AFC Championship game, for instance-and others like it. But of- ficials have been taking abuse of another nature at the local level-specifically, IM basketball, and a lot of people are concerned about it. IM referees, who are students just like you and I, have been subjected to threats, punches, chokings and shovings, as well as good old verbal abuse. This disrespect comes out from hardened criminals or crazed mental patien- ts, but from IM players. Students just like you and I. Now without getting into a "What is our society coming to" tirade, I want to point out that I don't really believe that the students on this campus are as immature as they sometimes act during athletic competition. People are responsible But people should be responsible for their own actions, and the excuseof "the heat of the competition" is a flimsy one at best. "Players have to realize that these games are supposed to be recreational, not life and death situations," said Sandy Sanders, who runs the officiating program for the intramural department. "They have to realize that referees can make mistakes." Sanders, who has been a referee himself for nine years, said that since a lot of IM officials are refereeing for the first time, many mistakes can be ex- pected. "The number one problem is peer pressure," he said. "There's a ten- dency on the part of the players to disrespect the officials because they are their peers. "Most of these guys have been playing basketball for 10, 12, 14 years. Most of our refs have never administered games before coming here. The way I look at it, a mistake is not a mistake unless it goes uncorrected. I ex- pect mistakes from new referees." The players, coaches and officials also agree that there is a problem, but they disagree as to the severity of the problem. "A lot of players don't respect IM refs because there are a lot of incon- sistently-called games," said Dave Brown, a law student in his first term of officiating. "One game the refs will call everything, and another they'll let everything go." These inconsistencies and mistakes are what lead to players hassling the officials. One official, Lou Corey, was once grabbed by the neck and picked up by a player who he had just ejected from the game. "Incidents like that are rare, though," Corey said calmly. "Certain people just don't know how to control themselves. You get a good deal of foul language from the players, but you've got to expect to take some flack." The self-control shown by some officials when faced with instances like that is remarkable. "I think the officials do an outstanding job for the adver- sity they're confronted with," Sanders said. "It's not really that bad, if you're not overly sensitive in your per- sonality," Brown said. "You've got to realize that the game means a lot to some kids. When I first started officiating, I was expecting a lot worse-a lot worse-And it just didn't happen." According to Hank Brennan, team manager of an .independent team, most players tend to get upset only momentarily, and that they don't hold the grudge after the game. "The refs aren't emotionally involved in the game like the players are," he said. "They tend to remember the incidents better, while a player soon forgets all about it." Still, official abuse at the intramural level is serious. "It's a big problem," Sanders said. "We get one or two a week (reports of official abuse), especially during the playoffs. Then everyone wants to be a ref." Draft plan considered Under a plan Sanders is considering, everyone would get a chance to do just that. "Next year we're thinking of instituting a-draft system where two players on each team must be officials. It would make everyone more sen- sitive to the position referees are in. It would cut down on the abuse, because you may disagree with a call, you may say,-Hey, Joe, you really blew that one,' but you certainly wouldn't hit a referee or cuss him out if he was a friend of yours." Only time will tell of the validity of that approach, but something should be done to educate the players regarding what it's like to be an official. And as anyone who's tried it will tell you, it's not easy. ' I can see how human emotion can induce a player to behave in a manner which he normally wouldn't, but players will simply have to be taught to exhibit more self-restraint. Because even if official abuse occurs at a minimal frequency, it occurs too often. BILLBOARD Anyone interested in being a manager of the 1978 Michigan football team contact Mark Andrews. Call him at 995-4825 after 6 p.m. SCORES EXHIBITION BASEBALL DETROIT 7, Montreal 0 Kansas City 14, Chicago (AL) 3 Texas 3. New York (AL) 1 Toronto 7, Pittsburgh 5 California 5. San Francisco 2 Oakland 4,. Milwaukee 2a Minnesota 10. Boston 2 Los Angeles 12. New York NI.) I Philadelphia IS, Cincinnati 5 Pittsburgh 4. St. Louis 2 C~hicago (NI.) 7. San Diego 1 Montreal ;, Houston 0 NHL Montreal 5, Colorado :l Boston 7, Chicagp 0 Atlanta 5, Si. Louis # NBA Milwaukee I 16. Portland to! ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT HOURS- 3:00-6:00 pfm Monday-Friday '1sPR ICE DRINKS 15C HOT DOGS BLUE FRh GE 611 Church 995-5955 HthavAP Photo Met second baseman Doug Flynn didn't get to see the double play he started but maybe he asked the Dodgers' Reggie Smith, who seems to be an interested observer, all about it. The only thing missing from the picture is Ron Cey's absurd waddling attempt to reach first after he hit into the play. Come on guys, we've heard of close encounters but this is ridiculous. BLUE SEARCHES FOR GREEN PASTURES: Fore! Lnksters fly to sunny south By TOM STEPHENS So the sun is finally getting warm and' everybody is looking forward to a green spring without those annoying mounds of dirty old snow; but for golfers the annual passage out of winter always goes far too slowly. Most linksters un- fortunate enough to be stuck in.Ann Ar- bor in March have to content them- selves with daily watching from State Street as the new spots of grass pop up on the University course just south of Yost arena. Michigan's men's golf team already has a pretty fair head start on the local exiles. With one tournament in South Carolina under their belts and a week of qualifying completed in Florida over spring break, the team shows good prospects in the Big Ten race. THE TEAM kicked off its season with. the Coastal Carolina Classic March 1st through 3rd at Bay Tree Plantation in Myrtle Beach. Senior captain Doug Davis opened the tournament with a bad-weather 74 good enough to tie for the tournament lead. The final 18 holes of the scheduled 54 hole event were cancelled on account of the weather and Davis' second day 75 left him in third place at 149, only three strokes behind host team South Carolina's medalist Rocky Reavis at 146. The Wolverines finished eighth overall in the 24-team field that was topped by Ball State's team score of 612. Michigan's team score was 627. ASSISTANT coach Jim Lipe called the tournament "a good showing for the first time out this season. Unfor- tunately the weather was too cold and. rainy." He particularly praised the per- formances of Davis and fellow senior John Morgan, whose 78-77-155 placed him at second best on the Wolverines. Fourteen prospective Blue linksters spent their spring vacation by special invitation at Cypress Creek Country Club in West Palm Beach, Florida. They were there for the annual Michigan spring team qualifier, a 72- hole tournament that determines who makes the varsity squad. Coach Bill Newcomb chose 12 of them to form what is in effect two golf teams; because only six players can compete in any one tournament. The low qualifier was Davis at 298. He was followed by two promising fresh- men, Tom Pursel and Ed Humenik, at 308. THE TEAM leaves Monday for the GAC intercollegiate in Cape Coral, Florida. Competing for Michigan will be Davis, Morgan, Pursel, Humenik, and juniors Frank Sims and Rod Paf- ford. Lipe was optimistic about the team's prospects. "Ohio State was just rated number two in the country by Golf Magazine and they're really tough so we're realistically playing for second place. We're just as good as anybody else (besides Ohio State) in the con- ference and hopefully better because our four freshmen are one of the finest groups in years. Indiana is tough too but we should have an edge on the rest. PLATIGNUM ITALIC SET We have outstanding leadership in Doug Davis and both he and John Morgan could be all Big Ten this year." With Davis and Morgan providing the steady performance and some looked- for improvement from freshmen Pur- sel, Humenik, Dave Koch, and Gordon Kastelic, the Wolverines could be something to watch when their golf course finally turns green this spring. AT YOUR SERVICE. 9 0 0' Billing 764-0550 Circulation 764-0558 Classifieds 764-0557 Display 764-0554 News 764-0552 (including happenings) Sports 764-0562 BU bounces Badgers PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) - Line- mates Mark Fidler and Dave Silk scored goals 36 seconds apart early in the final period Thursday night to spark Boston University to a 5-2 victory over defending champion Wisconsin in the 31st NCAA hockey championship before 8,136 fans at the Providence Civic Cen- ter. BU, 29-2, will meet the winner of Friday night's game between Boston College and Bowling Green in Saturday night's championship contest. .,,' VI=' Your Local Photofin isher" " 4 HOUR EKTACHROME SLIDE PROCESSING " SAME DAY KODACOLOR PRINTS SEE OUR YELLOW PAGES AD UNDER PHOTOFINISHING FOR A LIST OF OUR OTHER SERVICES. Contains afountainyenfivc fitalic nibs, and'instruction manua(a[ for ony $6.oo... At art materia(¥ strops, cof'leqIOokystores...crscn( checc l to ?'entaic. 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