Transcript Slide 1

Puget Sound Region
2013/2014 Team Officials Clinic
For those who have done USAV
Officiating previously
Clinic Agenda
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Welcome
Reffing as competitive advantage review
Definition of a well played and well officiated match review
2013/2014 Rule and technique changes
Lines person skills review
Score keeper skills review
– Recording sanctions
• Review R2 skills
– Cover back row and helping R1
• SK, ASK and R2 team exercise
• R1 skills
• dismiss
Reffing as competitive advantage
You and your team gain a competitive
advantage by:
1. Knowing the rules of the game
2. Being a good team when you officiate.
This helps be a good team when you
play.
3. Having players work in reffing positions
that help their game skills
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Libero being linesperson.
What is a well played and well
officiated match?
There are 3 principles, in order of
importance, they are:
• Safe
• Fair
• Play Moves Along
Safe
Physical safety is the state when the court is free
of hazards at the start of, and during play
• Don’t begin play, or if started, stop play, when a
hazard comes onto the court
– person comes on court, the court gets wet, a ball on
the court presents risk, etc
• Stop play when a player has stopped playing
due to a potential injury.
• This allows aid to be given quickly if needed.
Safe
• Emotional safety is the state when all
participants behave respectfully towards each
other.
– OK for participants and parents to respectfully
disagree with a call.
– OK for the captain/coach to respectfully question why
something was or wasn’t called.
– Not OK when the remarks are persistent, overly
dramatic, insults a person’s ability/effort/attributes, etc
When this line is crossed, apply sanctions.
Fair
• Rules are applied consistently.
• The officials strive to know and apply all
the rules.
• The officiating crew sets and maintains the
match tempo.
• When there is a question about the rules,
use the rule book. If there is still doubt,
bring in the Day Official.
Play Moves Along
• All TO’s and between set breaks are timed.
– TO’s are 30 seconds
– 3 minutes between sets, whistle to get on the court at
2 minutes and 30 seconds
• Substitutions and line up checks are handled
quickly.
• Questions by the captain, and when allowed by
rule, the coach, are handled quickly.
• Other match interruptions, like ‘ball on court’,
potentially injured player are handled quickly.
What are the three principles, in
order of importance?
New rules and techniques
• Screening
– The new rule changes the is that a screen is committed if the serving
team prevents their opponents from seeing the server AND the flight of
the ball. It used to be one or the other was all that was needed.
• Misconduct and its Sanctions
– The referees may choose to give two separate verbal warnings to the
same player for two separate incidences of minor misconduct.
– A yellow card is now like in high school/college, a documented warning.
It is given to an individual and counts as the only yellow for the team,
FOR THE MATCH. A second act of similar conduct would cause a red
card to be given to the team, not a person.
– Verbal warnings are still a possibility, even after a Yellow Card, if the
misconduct is very minor in nature.
New rules and techniques
• Team Composition (clarification only)
– Allows specific competitions to determine if modifying the roster size
limitation makes sense for the competition. An example would be for
PVL competition where roster sizes might be limited to 15 players rather
than 12.
• Assistant Coach (clarification only)
– Allows both the Head Coach and ONE Assistant Coach to be standing
at all times before and during the match.
• Illegal Player on Court (or out of position on court)
– Requires determining when the team first played with an illegal player,or
was first out of position, or had a wrong server and removes all their
points back to that moment in the set.
• Centerline Penetration
– Allows for complete penetration into the other side of the court with the
foot or feet (or any other body part) provided that some part of the body
remains either in contact with or directly above the center line, and there
is no interference with opponents. The penetration must also not
present a safety hazard to the opponents.
New rules and techniques
• The Libero
– The coach (or game captain) can declare a Libero unable to play for any
reason and at any time during the match. The team has the right to redesignate a new Libero to replace the Libero who has been declared
unable to play. The replaced Libero may not play again in that match.
– If a team starts with two, they must stay with the same two for the entire
match. If a team starts with one, they may change from set to set,
including not using a Libero for any set if they so desire. If no Libero is
designated to start the match, the team may elect to change and use a
maximum of one Libero per set for any subsequent sets.
– If the officials catch an illegal replacement before the start of the next
rally, the referees should whistle to prevent the next rally from starting,
correct the illegal replacement, and issue the appropriate Delay
Sanction (warning or penalty).
– If the officials do not catch the illegal replacement before the next serve,
this essentially means there is an illegal player on the court and the
referees follow the procedure for correcting the illegal replacement
exactly as they would an illegal substitution, losing all points while that
Libero was on the court.
Lines Person Exercise
Stand up - When the clinician calls out a
situation, give the correct hand signal(s)
– Correctly
– Quickly
– Held briefly
Three principles review
• Which of the principles does the lines
person affect?
• Give an example.
Score Keeping Review
• Score at time of sub
• Sanctions
Libero Tracking
Scorekeeper duties
and
libero tracker duties
• Both record starting lineups, in service
order.
• Both record libero numbers
• Both record substitutions
• If libero serves, both track which spot in
the service order it occurs
Practice game
Animals and Beasts, girls U17 teams, are
playing at Seattle U. today at 2 pm. It’s
match 4 on Court 2.
The R1 is your coach, the R2 is your
clinician. You are SK, your team is helping.
The Animals win the coin toss, and elect to
receive. The Beasts choose the left side
of the court.
Set begins
• R1 beckons for serve, at 2:06 pm, to start the
set, #12, of Animals, on left, is serving
• Beasts #12 contacts ball for service
• Beasts (on left) win point.
• Beasts win another point.
• Beasts win another point.
• Animals (on right) win the next rally.
• R1 beckons #16, of Animals to serve
• She contacts the ball
• Beasts win the rally
Set continues-1
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Beasts #8 subs out, #16 goes in
R1 beckons, and Beasts #16 contacts ball for service
Beasts win point.
Beasts win another point.
Beasts win another point.
Animals (on right) call time out.
After time out ends, #7 of the Animals is verbally warned by the
referee for her cranky behavior towards the crew
Beasts win another point when play restarts.
Animals win the next rally.
Animals Libero #3 replaces #1, and goes to service area
R1 beckons #3, of Animals to serve, #3 contacts the ball.
Beasts win the rally.
Set continues-2
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Beasts #2 is in service spot, R1 beckons, and Beasts #2 contacts ball for
service
R1 beckons, and Animals #15 contacts ball for service.
Animals win next point.
Animals win another point.
Beasts (on left) call time out.
After time out ends, the R2 notices the Beasts spilled water near the
sideline, and informs the R1.
The R1 hold a yellow card against their wrist on the Beasts side
After the pause, the Beasts win the rally.
Beasts sub #3 out, #9 in – Animals sub out #2, #10 in.
After a several second pause, another Animals sub goes into the sub zone.
The R2 waves the sub off, and signals an improper request.
R1 beckons #2, of Beasts, to serve
#2 contacts the ball, and Beasts win the rally.
#2 serves for 3 more points, and Animals call time out
Set continues-3
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After the time out, #2 Beasts serves, Animals win the rally
R1 beckons, and Animals #7 contacts ball for service
Animals #7 serves for 2 more points.
Beasts sub #9 out, #11 in
Animals #7 serves for another point.
Beasts win next rally.
#7 yells at the linesperson, saying she favored the other team with
the call. The R1 calls #7 over, and shows her a yellow card. #7
quietly acknowledges the card.
Beasts libero #19 replaces #11
R1 beckons #19, of Beasts, to serve. She contacts the ball
Animals win the rally.
R1 beckons, and Animals #4c contacts ball for service
Beasts win the rally
Set continues-4
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R1 beckons, and Beasts #12c contacts ball for service
Animals win the rally.
Beasts sub #11 out, #3 in – Animals sub out #10, #2 in.
R1 beckons #2, of Animals, to serve, #2 contacts the ball
Beasts win the rally.
R1 beckons, and Beasts #16 contacts ball for service
Beasts #16 serves 5 straight points
Animals #7 yells at the lines person, R1 shows a red
card, which #7 acknowledges
• Animals sub #7 out, #12 in.
• Beasts #16 serves the set out.
• Set finishes at 2:32 pm.
Deciding set actions
• What are the differences for a deciding
set?
Three principles review
• Which of the principles does the score
keeper affect?
• Give an example for each.
R2 duties
• The R2’s prime roles, supporting all three
principles, are:
• Check lineups to start match
– OK’s libero to enter
• Call faults on the defensive side (blocking)
– center line faults, net faults, ball touching antenna or
net outside antenna.
• Helps R1 with touches and ball hitting floor
(pancakes)
• Manage the benches
– Calls TO’s, manages substitutions, do line-up checks
when asked
Center line exercise
• Take the right action, based on the
pictures that follow (insert six pictures,
showing legal and fault center line
penetrations)
R2 Net Fault Exercise
• Add six photos here, showing legal and
fault net contacts
R2 focus areas
• Overlap/our of rotation
• Back row/illegal attack
• Helping the R1
Three Principles Review
• Which of the principles does the R2
affect?
• Give an example for each.
Team Exercise Script
Divide into groups of six
The drill starts with the game 2 scoresheet from the scorer
exercise.
All players starting on the court are considered player #11,
subbing player is #12.
Player #12 subs in for #11
Libero replaces #12
Player #12 replaces the libero, player #11 subs back in for
#12.
Rotate roles and repeat script. Rotation is #11 rotates to
#12, #12 to libero, libero to R2, R2 to Sc, Sc to ASc, ASc
to #11
The object of the drill is to make accurate and quick actions, with good
communication to all participants.
R1 Success
communication +
teamwork +
tempo management =
Safe, fair and moving along
Communication
• Voice
– Use to clarify situation, gather information and to
complement whistle
• Whistle
– Situational – Firm when needed to stop play, softer
when play is obviously over
• Hand Signals
– First line of communication on what was called
• Cards
– When none of the above worked to keep things on
track
Team work
• Know your team mates
– Pre-match talk
• Call the offensive side of the court.
– Serving side, attacking side
• Make the final call, WITH INPUT, from the
rest of your team.
Tempo Management
• Starts from coin toss
– If your team just played, conduct coin toss for
next match THEN talk with your team
• Get coaches to turn lineups in before end
of warm up
• Time TO’s and between set intervals
• Set and maintain even rhythm between
serves, after subs, etc
Ball Handling
• Tight
– Will call some legal plays as faults
• Loose
– Will let play continue on some faults
• Loose is better
R1 Communication exercise
• Show the hand signal for
– Hitter on left makes third contact, hits ball into net,
rebounds back into them
– Ball touched by blocker on right, lands just inside
endline
– Back row player on right, inside 3 meter line, attacks
ball toward other court, ball is above the net at
contact
– Player on left touches top of net tape
– Team on right takes too long to get back on court after
TO
Conclusion
• Any questions?
• Reminder to take Form C test – open book
Thank you!!!!