Farncombe Pete
New Member
I'm interested in tips on keeping a positive mindset.
Some context: I reffed two matches for my local club this weekend (U12 boys and U16 boys). Both relatively challenging, which why I was asked to ref (as some of our younger refs have had negative experiences with these teams). In the first match, the away coach was abusive after the match had finished. And I've submitted a report, as has the home coach. In the second match, I issued five cards - all totally justified - and after the match the away manager came up to me and said: "That was never a 5 card match", to which I replied "Thanks for your feedback and good luck for the rest of the season."
I'm quite self reflective, and am happy overall with how I reffed both matches. There's a couple of things I would have done differently (cautioning the manager in the first match; double checking a penalty decision in the second). But nothing major.
Now, we don't referee to earn praise or even thanks from coaches and managers.... But I am interested in the approach that other take to keep a positive mindset when getting totally unwarranted criticism (or abuse) from coaches who don't know the rules or have any respect for officials.
Any tips?
Some context: I reffed two matches for my local club this weekend (U12 boys and U16 boys). Both relatively challenging, which why I was asked to ref (as some of our younger refs have had negative experiences with these teams). In the first match, the away coach was abusive after the match had finished. And I've submitted a report, as has the home coach. In the second match, I issued five cards - all totally justified - and after the match the away manager came up to me and said: "That was never a 5 card match", to which I replied "Thanks for your feedback and good luck for the rest of the season."
I'm quite self reflective, and am happy overall with how I reffed both matches. There's a couple of things I would have done differently (cautioning the manager in the first match; double checking a penalty decision in the second). But nothing major.
Now, we don't referee to earn praise or even thanks from coaches and managers.... But I am interested in the approach that other take to keep a positive mindset when getting totally unwarranted criticism (or abuse) from coaches who don't know the rules or have any respect for officials.
Any tips?

