V V V Yu V -w- wI w _W T -W w -w- -W -W 4B Wednesday Apr10 2013%The Statement 5B ciating. I found Driscoll's contact information through his professional job as a local opera- tions director in Syracuse, N.Y. for Say Yes to Education - a program that offers academic assistance to Syracuse students in the city where he resides. While many referees devote themselves fulltime to officiating, others, like Driscoll, view it asa part-time job. "People are attorneys, they are police offi- cers, firefighters - you name it. There is a wide spectrum of professions that also officiate col- lege and high-school basketball." They're also fathers. Driscoll's three children - including his 17-year-old son, who justbegan officiating high-school games - and friends will often watch a broadcasted game that he's officiating, focusing on Driscoll instead of the typical stars on the court. I watched the last half of the Villanova ver- sus St. John's game with this intent. As the lens of the camera hugged tightly to the players, I caught a glimpse of a striped black-and-white shirt and a tall, dark-haired man at the bottom of the key in Madison Square Garden. This was Driscoll, and my first actual conscious sighting of a man I'm sure I've seen on televisionbefore - he's officiated six Michiganbasketballgames this season. The score was 50-45, Villanova leading, with 7:14left in the game.And the play- ers of the two teams were fighting for points. "The officials in the NFL would throw flags on these plays," the announcers added after an especially intense collision between players at the St. John's hoop. But in the pressure of the game, Driscoll kept his composure, possessing the calm demeanor he described of his own father. He weaved effortlessly across the court to better view the action, always careful to stay out of the plays but close enough to watch. It almostseemed as if a force existedbetween the players and the officials, each recognizing the other's presence and circulating like planets in orbit avoiding collision. The clash came when Driscoll and his two fellow officials, poised with whistles in their mouths ready to make a call, did their job. In Ted Hillary's 44 years as a referee, he faced the challenge of players, coaches and fans imparting their emotions, especially frustra- tion, onto the officials after a call. His three sons and wife, Kathy, used to attend the games he officiated until it became too much. "She had the children at the game, and they were asking their mother, 'Why do these people hate Dad?' She would come up with a million excuses and then decided I'm not taking these kids to anymore games," Hillary said. Hillary refuses to attend basketball games anymore due to the harsh vocal opinions of many fans. "It's real tough. I want to go up and slap them. They are just sometimes so ignorant, and then I think to myselfi No wonder these people are yelling that out there, they don't know what they're talking about." But the question remains: why do fans act this way towards officials? Hillary doesn't know, and he mulls over this question more than any other in our conversation. His tone even suggests he hasn't given much thought to