LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily -Thursday,N .big Ten officials spend week preparing for Saturday ovember 18, 1999 - 7A game3 OFFICIALS Continued from Page 1A The job now requires spending entire weekends away from home. On Friday nights, the crew reviews film of different plays after dinner. Before the game on Saturday there is breakfast and after the *ame is more film. The schedule barely allows for a round of golf Friday afternoon when the weather is nice, but officials said they still manage to squeeze in an occasion- al game. The preparation for the next week's game begins while many fans are still recovering from the affects of Saturday's game. "I start thinking about football again Sunday afternoon. I get home from church and start watching tape from the gane the day before and think, 'Now it's time to get Beady for next week,"' said David Witvoet, head referee for Saturday's game. "It's pret- ty much Saturday through Saturday." Because football is a part of the officials' daily life it requires a enormous commit- ment, not only from the official himself, but also from the officials' families. "It takes a lot of time. I use my personal vacation to travel on Fridays, usually. That means I'm taking 10 days of my vacation that I could be using to spend with my fam- , not to mention the weekends each fall that I'm not home," Witvoet said. "You have to have a love for it and you also have to have a very understanding fam- ily, good support at home. It has happened where families haven't been supportive and there have been break-ups in marriages over officiating," Ransom said. "It's not all bad though. Big Ten, officiating has been great for my family. My family has been able to enjoy a lot of things from football that they *herwise would not have been able to enjoy. y kids traveled with me for several years when they were young and got to see all of the Big Ten schools. "When you are fortunate enough to get scheduled for a post-season bowl game, your family is included in that. Those trips have been a highlight for a lot of our families but they still have to be supportive," he said. Officiating games isn't the only responsi- bility of referees - they must deal with Sher aspects of the game, including death reats. "There are some games, there could be 15,000 to 20,000 kids coming on the field. You are one of seven guys with a striped shirt and white knickers. All of a sudden you become one against all of those people depending on whether they won or lost," Ransom said. "It's difficult to get everyone surrounded by security." Despite the commitment officiating requires - both physically and emotionally - it's still only a side job for most referees. While football may be running through their minds during the week, most officials still have to focus on other jobs. Ransom is part-owner of a family-operat- ed lumber store in central Indiana. Being away from the store for a few days every week could pose a problem for many people, but he has a system in place. "It creates some situations that make it a little more of a hardship than I would like. I'm lucky that I have a brother who is a part- ner," Ransom said. "We have a good under- standing that when football season is here, it's my season. When football season is over, it's his season." Before he decided to become an official, Bob Colburn was a high school teacher and a coach. Now, in retirement, he said he lives like a college student, "I basically don't do anything. I get start- ed about one in the afternoon," Colburn said. "I used to coach high school and college football and I decided that I didn't want to go that route. I didn't want to have to go to a clinic every January and try to find a job if the head coach got fired and my wife didn't want to do that either. Officiating was natur- al for me because my father had officiated forever - at 75 he was still an active high school football official." Saturday will be the fourth time in Colburn's 20-year officiating career that he will referee for the Michigan vs. Ohio State battle as side judge. He said even though it's a game he's worked before, it still carries a lot of anticipation. "It doesn't get any bigger than that. That game, to me, is better than any bowl assign- ment that I have had, it's a better game to work," he said. The officials are the first to say college football excites them, but they are also quick to point out that it isn't the teams that excite them, but the game itself. "You can get excited during a game because a game gets exciting," Witvoet said. "There are a lot of plays going back and forth and it's fun. "It's a fun type of excitement. It's not like a fan gets excited, a biased type of excite- ment, it's just fun being out there," he said. For many fans, watching a game in Michigan Stadium and being part of a crowd that can exceed I11,000 in the largest col- lege stadium in the nation is a memorable experience, but for the officials, the same games just don't stand out. Officials said that stems from the week- to-week practice of working in front of large crowds and from the relatively tame nature of fans in Michigan Stadium. "Doing a game in Michigan Stadium isn't really that different from other stadiums. It's not an awesome structure, and they don't make as much noise here as they do in other stadiums," Colburn said. "I don't know if it's because of the structure, but the noise does- n't come onto the field like it does at Ohio State, Wisconsin or Penn State. This place seems to be less noisy than anywhere that we go. "To me, Ohio Stadium is the most awe- some facility that I have every worked in. From the ground up it's all cement, here, it's dug down in a hole. From the outside, this stadium doesn't look like much, and if someone didn't tell you that there are 110,000 people in there, I don't think that you would know it," he added. Even if the noise doesn't reach the same decibel level as in other stadiums, officials said they feel the wrath of the fans here just as much as at other stadiums. "Here they throw marshmallows. The stu- dents bring the marshmallows to the game and whether or not you are working a good game, they are going to throw the marshmal- lows," Colburn said. "The craziest group though is Wisconsin. I tell you though, they are having fun. They will send some girl all the way around the horseshoe, and she likes it so much that they will send her back," he said. "Then they have a cheer, where like Ohio has '0-H-T- O', at Wisconsin it's 'Eat-Shit-Fuck-You' and that's their cheer. They do that at least twice every game that I've been to. They are just a wild group." Whether they're shouting profanities or throwing projectiles, most fans don't actual- ly attract the officials' attention. No matter how loud the crowd yells, officials said they are usually so busy with the game that the cries of the fans go unheard. But on occasion some fans manage to strike a chord with an official. "When they're yelling at you, you are usu- ally thinking, 'What idiots,"' Ransom said. "Sometimes though, the things that the fans say are so funny, you want to laugh, but you have to keep a solemn face. You can't laugh "We don't care who wins, and we are probably the only seven guys in the stadium - out of 111, 000 - who don't care who wins. -- Bob Colburn Big Ten official because of your position." The team unity of the officials working each game eases the pressure of fans and other factors. None of the referees look at themselves as one person, instead they said, they think in terms of one unit that must function properly for the game to be played. "What's tough is that we're in the middle. We don't care who wins, and we are proba- bly the only seven guys in the stadium - out of I11,000 - who don't care who wins," Colburn said. The officials said nearly every aspect of refereeing the game is similar to actually playing the game, whether it's moving on the field or relying on a teammate. "Each position has its own job to do, its own area to cover. One guy can't cover it all and if one guy falls down, we all fall down," Ransom said. "It's not like, 'Bob screwed it up and I don't have to worry about it.' We're seven guys out there and we either do well together, or we don't do well together." Fans, take note: Officials realize that they make mistakes -just like players do. "Not one of us has ever worked a perfect game. You hope that if you did miss a call, it's not the type of call that, in the eyes of a lot of people, affected the outcome of a game," Colburn said. "Any time that any of us has blown a call, no one feels good about it." Even when calls are missed and emotions rage, officials said they still receive the player's respect. "All of us that are inside the white lines - whether it be the players or the officials - have a mutual respect for each other," Colburn said. "In 20 years, I can't ever recall getting a nasty comment from a kid on the field, even when he thinks that you blew it. He may jump up and down, you can tell that he thinks you blew the call but he's not going to come up in your face." While players are respectful, coaches can be an entirely different case. Coaches berate the officials as much on the field as fans see watching a game at home. Not surprisingly, former Michigan coach Bo Schembechler had his share of run-ins with officials. "I can remember one time, I'll try to cleanK it up. There was a time when a call went against Bo, and he was on the sidelines and he made reference to the official who made the call. He looked to the sky and said, 'Of all the buttholes in the world, why did you send me the biggest one today?,"' Colburn : recalled. "Bo was a hard guy to get along with but he is a really fun guy to be around, especial- , ly since he married this young woman. She is very attractive, and she is a great person. L asked Bo, 'How in the world can an ugly guy like you get such a gorgeous wife?' he said, 'Bob, I always could recruit"' It is not only the game that drives officials in their weekend careers, but also everything that goes along with it, especially the close friendships that they have made along the way. "Sometimes you have better friends here than you do at home. The way that things are set up today, you see as much of these guys as your friends at home," Ransom said. "You develop life-long relationships with people from every state where there is a Big Ten school," Witvoet said. "Football is a weekend. You get to spend a weekend with six other guys, there is a camaraderie among football officials." The love of the game is probably more important for the officials than it is for the players or the coaches. There is no glory, only pure enthusiasm to sustain them. "No matter what game it is, or where it is,, every game is exciting," Witvoet said. "College football is excit- ing, the atmosphere surrounding college football is special, there is nothing else like. it." "The NFL can't even come close to. matching what it's like to be on a college. campus, it's just not the same," Colburn said. "Being on a campus in the Big Ten con- ference on a Saturday afternoon in the fall; it's as good as it gets." 1. FLORAL DELIVERY DRIVERS. F/T or P/T. Progressive Comp. Apply at Nielsen's Flower Shop. 1021 Maiden Ln. 994-6112. GET PAID TO SLEEP! Overnight help needed for disabled male law student. 3 slights per week. Hours vary. Pay neg. Will in. 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