You know them as referees – those guys in the worst uniforms with their whistles and assorted cards. When you agree with them, you praise them. When you disagree with them, they are your mortal enemies. In reality, they are actually human. They have families and day jobs, just like anyone else. But they are not like the rest of us. Unlike the rest of us, they take on the most despised job in calcio, and they take abuse from management, coaches, players, and fans. Are they actually human? Who are these people?
One of the best refs ever to grace Serie A, Collina only *looks* crazy |
Referees have day jobs. They are dentists, financial advisors, hospital directors, hairdressers, and more. To be able to referee international matches, they must also be fluent in multiple languages. Many are very educated, having completed both college and their myriad referee and technical trainings. In order to referee at the Serie A level, they must climb the ranks, officiating in many Lega Pro and Serie B matches first. To remain a referee, they must also continue training and they meet often to review various matches and learn to improve. Plus, there is the physical training, as they must find time to stay in top shape as well. They are all tested regularly to ensure they have the speed and stamina to keep up with the players. Oh, and somewhere in there, they find time for their families.
Sounds
fun, right? Those are just the basic requirements. It is apparently some kind
of honor, because when you break down what it takes to become a referee and all
that it takes to be assigned to a match as a head ref, the money just isn’t
worth it. A good referee in Serie A who is assigned enough matches as a head
ref per season can earn up to €70.000, but they are the exception, not the rule.
An assistant ref assigned the same number of games earns half that much. And it
is all downhill from there. When you consider all of the time they spend
training both physically and technically as well as all of the time they invest
to climb to that level, they are investing as much as the players, but have to
have day jobs, too, and will never even make a fraction of what the players do.
Those punk players are just waiting for the chance to card you in return. |
Plus,
there is no amount of money that can compensate for the hate they receive. In
addition to constantly being accused of matchfixing or taking bribes, their
lives are under a microscope. Amongst Italians, their every life detail is
known – and discussed – each week as soon as they are assigned a game. It’s not
just suspicion, or even superstition. Italians know if the ref ever attended a
match for the opposing team, or said anything favorable at all about them. And
if that is the case, they are convinced that the match is fixed, days before it
is even played, at least in the eyes of the fans. The media affords proverbial
dossiers on every ref for every match, including details like every
questionable call they ever made to where they were born and where they
currently live. The Hollywood paparazzi have nothing on the Italian calcio
media.
On
the pitch, they must always stay calm. You know, like when that psycho looking
player who just stamped on his opponents face is coming at you because you are
holding up the red card for him? Yeah. Stay calm. Or that manager, who makes at
least twice as much as you at both of your jobs, is waving his arms maniacally
and screaming at you with those possessed eyes? Sure, just stay calm. Or what
about those 30,000 fans in the stands who disagree with that last call you
made? You know the ones with the tattoos everywhere, biceps as big as your
thighs, and lighting something other than flares up there? The ones screaming
for your head on a platter? There’s only 30,000 of them and one of you, so just
stay calm, right? Between you and “security,” who might also be biased, I’m
sure you’ll be safe getting to your car. Or even home, since they all know
where you live.
Coaches and players forget to give you personal space (or respect) |
And
don’t worry about that one bad call you made, you will have plenty of time to
see it again and again and again and again on every single channel from now
until next matchday, or maybe even for years if you really screwed up. And
you’ll be watching it from home, because if you make one mistake that is bad
enough, you’ll never ref again. Coaches and players make mistakes, and they are
maligned, but a ref’s mistakes are forever.
Nevermind
the conditions under which those mistakes are made. There are dozens of cameras
in a stadium, each with zoom capacity, too. But there is only one head ref. There
is no humanly way possible to always have the perfect vantage point for every
play, so you do your best, and trust your linesmen. They are also limited by
vantage point, or may have seen something different than you, but the final
decision rests with you, thus also the final blame. Nevermind that there are
weather and other visibility conditions that can impair your view (like smoke
from those “flares” previously mentioned.) Or the players that are in the way,
the angle something happens, or the split second opportunities for human error,
too. Not even technology could always get it right, and when your job is to
ensure that the game keeps flowing, there is not time to stop and process the
information your eyes received until it is all over.
Probably WC2010's best ref, Rosetti, sent home for trusting his linesman |
In
summary, these people are friendless, and often victims of witch hunts or
worse. They spend every spare second of their time training to have the skills
needed for the most hated job in calcio. They get paid next to nothing compared
to the other people involved in the game, and one mistake can cost them this,
their second job. They are harassed and maligned no matter what they do, and
sometimes they and their families even threatened. So who are these people? What kind of person would do this, when the
negatives outweigh the positives? Who seeks out this job, and studies and
trains and tries to excel at it?
My
only guess is that they truly love calcio. Maybe more than the rest of us. For
without them, the game could not be played. They must truly enjoy the thrill of
seeing thousands of fans enjoying the game, even if those thousands of fans
hate them in vociferous and sometimes physical ways. They are there to support
the coaches who scream at them, the players who threaten them and argue with
them. They show up, on their own time, to facilitate what brings so much joy to
the rest of us. I have no idea what kind of person would do this, day in and
day out, but I am truly grateful. I am grateful for all of their sacrifices and
for all of their hard work and training to facilitate the beautiful game. At
least until the next one makes a bad call against my team.
This post inspired by the music of
Suicidal Tendencies' "Institutionalized"
Happy New Year!
Our next match is a Friendly
Pro Patria vs. AC Milan
Thursday, January 3rd • 15:00 CET (9am EDT)
Happy New Year!
Our next match is a Friendly
Pro Patria vs. AC Milan
Thursday, January 3rd • 15:00 CET (9am EDT)
Referees: Who ARE These People?
Reviewed by Elaine
on
12:00 AM
Rating: