Refs: Parents
may not like it
By:
Lois Kalchman, Special to The Toronto Star
Minor hockey
referees are getting ready for a major headache.
They're concerned
that Hockey Canada's decision on the weekend to adopt the NHL's
tough new approach to stick fouls and obstruction will be difficult
to introduce and enforce.
Among their
worries is the potential for additional battles with hot-tempered
parents unhappy at seeing their child caught up in a penalty parade.
"I would
like to think the parents will buy into it, but when it impacts
their kid and he is sitting out then I (the referee) am a bad
person," said Dave Wedlake, who has been officiating in the
Ontario Minor Hockey Association and junior hockey for more than
three decades.
"It's
a huge challenge - one I believe in and am looking forward to."
There will
be other challenges. More penalties means longer games - a huge
issue when ice time is rented by the hour and hard to come by.
And there's the difficulty of teaching officials the new standards
and ensuring they enforce them consistently.
Last season,
there were more than 8,100 officials certified by the OMHA, Greater
Toronto Hockey League, The Alliance and Ontario Hockey Association
in and around southern Ontario. Over the next four months, they
and thousands of other officials across Canada will be asked to
attend clinics to prepare for the changes.
"For
us, it will be a massive education process," said Wedlake.
"The
NHL is in a different world than we are. ... The NHL has only
600 players and 85 of the best officials in the world. We in Canada
are dealing with thousands of officials, hundreds of thousands
of players and their parents and we all have to buy in to this
to be successful. It's a trickle-down effect."
Kevin Boston,
the OMHA's director of marketing and communications, predicted
it "will take a while - maybe a few years - to have it all
filter down."
In the meantime,
the changes will have an instant impact on the length of games.
"All
our GTHL games (between 10,000 and 12,000 per season) are played
in prime time and we don't have enough ice now and ... and there
won't be a bunch of new rinks appearing before next season. We
could have three curfewed games a night or have to cut it to two
games a night," GTHL referee-in-chief Brian Coles said.
"Maybe
the league will have to cut the schedule."
Dave Lichacz,
who has been officiating for about 25 seasons in the GTHL, also
predicted there will be a lag time before parents embrace the
new rules.
"It will
be frustrating at first until they get used to it," he said,
comparing it to the introduction of the checking-from-behind rule.
"At
first there was moaning and groaning and for a year or so they
didn't understand the rule. ... Once the referees became more
consistent and called it properly, first the players accepted
it and then the parents ..."
Copyright
©2006 Toronto Star Newspapers, Ltd. — The Toronto Star
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