I'll begin by saying that I know we got it right, but things could have gone quite wrong. That's why I seek a bit of advice.
Adults game, good regional division. The ARs are good friends and very good referees I can rely on, and we use communicators. It's 0-0 and just 7 minutes left on the clock. White side counter-attack and play the ball near the corner of the box next to the AR, and I'm close. A red defender tackles the white player recklessly; it's gonna be a caution all day. All of a sudden, a white player manages to play the ball straight to a teammate with a great chance to score a goal. Advantage, it is. Neither the leading AR nor have I managed to see the number of the offender, and both of us (and the trailing AR, by the way) are positive that the tackle deserves a caution. So I waited some two seconds -they felt like an eternity- for the offender to stand up so that I could see his number. No sooner had this happened than I find that there is a white player in control of the ball just 7-8 yd away from the goal surrounded by two red defenders and the goalkeeper -we know that things CAN happen in this situation. And I'm not even in the box, he's at the far post from my position, so he's some 20 yd away from me. Had he been fouled, or had a red defender handled the ball, none of us would have been in a position to make a credible decision. This was overseen with the help of the trailing AR, who covered me from his position. Still, being at the halfway line isn't quite good if you have to make a game-changing decision.
Summing up, my dilemma was either focusing on offender identification or the follow-up. I chose the former, and involuntarily relinquished my chances of being ready to judge a possible penalty or a dive -the fact that neither of them happened doesn't change the fact that it was a great opportunity for them to happen. The leading AR had to focus on offside, so he couldn't identify the offender. Two seconds later, when it dawned on me that I was in a bad position, I asked the trailing AR for help.
Happily, he scored with no apparent offence, the AR could get the number of the guy who scored, and I could caution the offender to the surprise of nobody. But this is a great opportunity for surprises to occur. So... how would wou handle this situation?
Adults game, good regional division. The ARs are good friends and very good referees I can rely on, and we use communicators. It's 0-0 and just 7 minutes left on the clock. White side counter-attack and play the ball near the corner of the box next to the AR, and I'm close. A red defender tackles the white player recklessly; it's gonna be a caution all day. All of a sudden, a white player manages to play the ball straight to a teammate with a great chance to score a goal. Advantage, it is. Neither the leading AR nor have I managed to see the number of the offender, and both of us (and the trailing AR, by the way) are positive that the tackle deserves a caution. So I waited some two seconds -they felt like an eternity- for the offender to stand up so that I could see his number. No sooner had this happened than I find that there is a white player in control of the ball just 7-8 yd away from the goal surrounded by two red defenders and the goalkeeper -we know that things CAN happen in this situation. And I'm not even in the box, he's at the far post from my position, so he's some 20 yd away from me. Had he been fouled, or had a red defender handled the ball, none of us would have been in a position to make a credible decision. This was overseen with the help of the trailing AR, who covered me from his position. Still, being at the halfway line isn't quite good if you have to make a game-changing decision.
Summing up, my dilemma was either focusing on offender identification or the follow-up. I chose the former, and involuntarily relinquished my chances of being ready to judge a possible penalty or a dive -the fact that neither of them happened doesn't change the fact that it was a great opportunity for them to happen. The leading AR had to focus on offside, so he couldn't identify the offender. Two seconds later, when it dawned on me that I was in a bad position, I asked the trailing AR for help.
Happily, he scored with no apparent offence, the AR could get the number of the guy who scored, and I could caution the offender to the surprise of nobody. But this is a great opportunity for surprises to occur. So... how would wou handle this situation?