Tuesday June 19, 2007

 

 

 

 

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Sports

by KEVIN PAMBA
Incompetent referees, touch judges killing game

Look at where the referee is standing in pictures ‘A’ and ‘B’ that I took during the SP Cup game between Brian Bell Bulldogs and Mabey and Johnson Muruks in Madang last Sunday.
The players in both pictures are in front of the referee as they line up in defence against the opposition.
In rugby league, when defending players are in front of the referee or the two touch judges as they line up to move up in defence, it is regarded as being “off-side”.
The referee then blows the whistle and penalises the defending team.
If the referee does not notice the mistake, the touch judge on the side of the defending team, raises the flag indicating the off-side.
The referee then sees the raised flag and blows the whistle.
Picture ‘C’ shows the players moving up in defence from an off-side position.
In all these three off-side cases, the referee or the touch judges did nothing and allowed the game to continue.
Some of the spectators and team officials could be heard screaming “referee off-side” on many occasions.
I don’t know whether it was a genuine oversight or deliberate but the Port Moresby referee simply ignored the offside play on many occasions.
On certain occasions, the referee appeared to be inside the 10m of the mandated defence line, allowing the defence of one team to move quicker to tackle giving little room for the attacking side to move.
The anomaly cited above did not generate any drama as fortunately this game was played in Madang where people do not take the law into their own hands during SP Cup games.
I am not condoning the bashing up of referees and touch judges each time they are alleged to have ruled incorrectly.
But the point is that referees and touch judges are getting away with incompetent, clumsy and biased administration of games.
Why should referees and touch judges destroy a game with their poor refereeing because they are biased or incompetent and then cower under the protection that “referee’s decision is final and should be respected”?
This column thinks the biased and incompetent referees and touch judges have for so long been protected by the game’s administrators while teams and their supporters continue to be treated as the bad guys.
The paying public is sick and tired of poor performances of referees and touch judges in the SP Cup games.
If the SP Cup is a “semi-professional” competition, for goodness sake, the refereeing should also reflect this.
Some of the referees and touch judges are said to possess Level One and Level Two or Australian recognised refereeing certificates but the way they administer the games speaks something else.
These so-called ‘qualifications’ are obtained from mostly the odd one-week course that comes around once a while.
The question is, whether a one-week course is enough to qualify a referee to run high-stakes games like the SP Cup.
The health and fitness of referees and touch judges is another area that should be looked at.
At the moment, this area is not being addressed as health and fitness of referees and touch judges plays a part in their performance.
It is time the PNG rugby league administration fixes the problems with refereeing or referees and touch judges will continue to be bashed up.
Poor refereeing particularly by biased individuals also kills the growth of the sport and this area must be addressed.
This column thinks referees have a very long way to go to catch up with the milestone set by PNG’s only international whistleblower Graham Ainui in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
I remember those days when I always liked watching games refereed by Ainui at the Lloyd Robson Oval in Port Moresby.
Ainui was sharp, firm and fair and the way he handled the matches were a delight to watch unlike at present.

 

       

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