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LOOK OUT FOR SECRET SIGNALS
Radio communications between referee and his three assistants
will not feature in Germany
LONDON—If the soccer gets boring at the World Cup, watch
out for the secret signals between the match officials running
the game.
Although they have been
tested in top European competition this season, radio communications
between the referee and his three assistants will not feature
in Germany, although it appears inevitable that they will soon
play a part in elite soccer.
But electronic devices
are not the only way for the team of match officials to communicate.
Over the years referees
have developed discreet ways of passing or receiving messages,
often involving the assistants helping out the man in the middle
when he or she may not have seen an incident.
A player tumbles to
the ground in the penalty area and the referee, his view of the
incident blocked by a crowd of players, looks quickly at the linesman.
If he raises his flag to his chest briefly, then it’s a
penalty.
If the linesman places
his hand on his breast pocket—where yellow and red cards
are kept—then he’s recommending a yellow or red card.
The players have most
probably not realized the assistant has given the decision and
so do not charge at the linesman in fury, leaving the referee
to take the flak, as is his duty.
The ball bounces down
from the crossbar. Did it cross the line? The assistant referee
is best placed to see and the sight of him running back toward
the halfway line for a restart tells the referee it’s a
goal.
If he stays where he
is, then the ball has not crossed the line.
For years referees have
run what they call a diagonal system to keep up with play, ensuring
they are always looking across toward the linesman with play in
between. Now, however, as the game has sped up, referees are under
instructions never to be more than 15 meters from play.
Sometimes, however,
that’s impossible and the linesman has to help out while
the referee catches up. For those few moments and whenever he
is closer to play than the referee, the assistant has much more
power than the spectator realizes.
At the elite level,
the referee, unless he is absolutely convinced to the contrary,
will accept the decision of the linesman faithfully. At the World
Cup, the officials are a team, almost all from the same country
and a group that often officiates together in their national league,
so they know and trust each other.
The latest trend in
refereeing is for the 10-minute clampdown. Soccer games inevitably
have flashpoints when the referee needs to be at his most alert
and firm.
For the first 10 minutes
of a match, especially if it’s a grudge game, the referee
will be tough on everything, blowing his whistle for every misdemeanor.
As the game progresses and players settle down, the referee will
also start allowing play to flow and speed up, ignoring some challenges.
But when tension suddenly
erupts, the 10-minute clampdown returns. Look out in Germany for
the referee holding his arm rigidly by his side with his fist
clenched as he alerts his linesmen that they need to be on the
same wavelength.
A few minutes later,
as calm is gradually restored, the referee will make a similar
signal with a rigid arm, only the fist is replaced with an open
hand and the officials can relax a little.
Several other methods
of communications exist between a referee and his linesmen, but
the most important is eye contact. Every referee, in his prematch
instructions to his match officials, will stress how crucial it
is for them to be looking at each other.
Ever wondered why it’s
not very often that a referee points one way for a throw in and
the linesman points the other. Watch the nonflag holding hand
of the linesman. if it is raised slightly, it’s a signal
for the referee to give the throw-in that way.
But the assistant will
also be looking at the referee’s left or right hand and
will always opt for a majority decision rather than be seen to
disagree with his boss.
It’s very rare
that a referee does not see his linesman waving the flag. But
if he doesn’t, the final weapon in the assistant’s
armory is a button on the end of his flag which, when pressed,
sets off a loud buzzer on a strap concealed under the referee’s
sleeve.
That’s a sure-fire
way of attracting the referee’s attention. AP
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