Monday, March 26, 2012

President's Trap

We are on our way to having the driest March in Denver "history."  That means two things.  One:  No problems with games being cancelled due to weather.  Two:  Mother Nature will get us in April or May. :)

Our President's Cup (Boys U14+) kicked off this past weekend.  After many changes from our Assignor, I ended up with one U17 CR and one U17 A/R.

Start with the A/R game (my 2nd).  One coach came up to us and told us "we are running an offside trap.  I support the referees, but yesterday they blew 2 calls which lead to 2 goals...please watch for it."  OK coach.  So in the 1st half I was on their defense side which meant I got to watch for the trap.  I'm not a coach, but I have now concluded that the Offside Trap is a bad idea when it is the foundation of your defensive strategy.  You are now making me, the A/R, part of your defense, as opposed to my true role which is to provide information to my CR, first and foremost monitoring for an offside violation.  The opposing team took 10 minutes to unlock the defense.  First they discovered the defense was struggling with diagonal runs.  Then they discovered the defense didn't have the speed to recover.  Third they discovered that the A/R sometimes misses a call - I think I missed one offside call that lead to a goal, but my other calls were spot on.  Finally, they discovered they could just beat the defense dribbling.  An offside trap when run on occasion can be an effective strategy.  What I've seen in sub-elite youth levels is that the defense is trying so hard to execute the trap that when they fail they rarely get back in defensive shape.  So even if the attack slows, their shape is terrible, and a good possession team will score over and over again.  Which happened as the final was 9-1 in favor of the non-trapping team.

Monday, March 12, 2012

All about the Angles

Had just one CR assignment this weekend for a U-13 F Premier-1 (i.e. best of the U13 girls in CO) game.  It was a decent morning (finally was comfortable enough to wear ref shorts!) but the wind was blowing.  Which of course means positioning on GKs and keeper 'punts' is challenging.  I had two notable non-calls in the 1st half of said game related to my positioning and angle to the play:

  1. I was in perfect position to watch a 2 handed push during a header challenge on a punt.  I was only 4 yards away!  And...and...and...my whistle never met my mouth.  My Senior AR asked me at half about that saying "well did you see..." and I finished "oh the 2 handed push that for some reason I didn't call?"  He laughed and said "well, at least you saw it, and yes, that's happened to me too."
  2. I hate when that happens. :(

  3. The 2nd non-call.  Normally when there's a GK or 'punt' I take position based on USSF guidelines adjusting for actual physical ability and tendencies.  I try to catch the initial kick contact out of the corner of my eye to make sure there's not a short kick or something crazy and then of course I focus on the field since the player movement will bring me to the ball.  Well this kick the wind caught the ball and was bringing it right at me.  So I got out of the way as quickly as possible but that left me parallel to the play.  So I saw a challenge that to me appeared OK.  Well...if I was where I *should* have been and had a more perpendicular angle, I would've seen one girl more or less climb over the other girl which would've been an easy charging foul call.  Bad angle!
Fortunately, I was much better in the 2nd half.  My SAR even said "you got all the calls right."  Well at least according to him. :)

In other news...

Monday, March 5, 2012

Mother Nature - undefeated and untied

Well a bummer for me this past weekend.  What should have been eight games (3 on turf, 5 on grass) ended up being ONE (on turf).  Mother Nature (or is it Old Man Winter?) didn't give us the needed warm temperatures (and winds) to dry out the rest of the Denver Metro grass fields, especially on the south side of town.