davidmt
New Member
Hi everyone,
As I’ve mentioned in other posts, I'm a new referee in the UK, after having refereed in Spain and Canada. My English is good, but I would like some advice and ideas on how British referees communicate in certain situations where I feel I have less fluency or knowledge of what players can understand:
As I’ve mentioned in other posts, I'm a new referee in the UK, after having refereed in Spain and Canada. My English is good, but I would like some advice and ideas on how British referees communicate in certain situations where I feel I have less fluency or knowledge of what players can understand:
- What to say to the wall in the penalty box: What is the standard way referees communicate to warn players about unnatural arm positions, etc.?
- What to say when the ball touches a hand/arm during play but it is not a handball offense: What do you usually shout in this situation?
- Clarifying "play on": Does saying "play on" indicate that you are giving an advantage, or does it mean there was no foul, so they should continue playing?
- Dealing with corners: What do you say when players are pushing or grabbing each other during corners?
- Offensive language: This might be a funny one, but regarding insults like "****," "****," etc., could someone provide a summary of what kinds of language should be considered a clear red card offense? I understand that context is important, but some guidance on this would be helpful, especially now that I’m officiating in the lower divisions of the game.
- Polite ways to control player behavior: I would like to hear suggestions for "polite" ways to tell players to calm down or "shut up" without being disrespectful. Essentially, ways to maintain control when cards can still be avoided, but a firm response is needed.