The Ref Stop

New Referee Support

Donate to RefChat

Help keep RefChat running, any donation would be appreciated

leyemay

New Member
Hello everyone,
I just officiated my third game—an open men’s match—and while it generally went well, I faced significant challenges. There were a couple of offsides and a red card decision for serious foul play which, considering the strong reactions from the affected team, I might have judged incorrectly.
I find myself increasingly anxious before games, struggling with sleeplessness the night before, and distressed by how quickly a good game can be perceived as poor due to one or two mistakes. The level of verbal abuse and dissent is overwhelming, with no respect for my decisions (e.g., an injured player refused to leave the field to avoid his team being down to ten men, and any attempt at cautioning led to severe dissent).
Moreover, my attempts to seek guidance from the referee development officer have been met with silence, leaving me feeling unsupported and disheartened. This situation makes me question my future in refereeing.
I have immense respect for all of you here—how do you handle such dissent and maintain your composure? I’m honestly close to stepping down if the next couple of games are as demoralizing as the recent ones. Any advice or support would be greatly appreciated. I’d like to add, my day job on paper would be seem as 10x harder than refereeing (think doctor/police/fireman etc)…but I will tell you, refereeing is 10x mentally harder. Now I see why the retention rate is dire.
Any advice? If you’re advice is that I am probably
not cut for this and should step down, then I’ll take that! I’m probably not, given my strong negative emotions rn. Not the level I expected .
Good evening sir, this could be my advice for the Referee.
The Referee is going through a tough but common phase in refereeing, and I completely understand how the referee feel. Many referees, even at the highest levels, have faced similar moments of doubt. Officiating is incredibly demanding not just physically but mentally and emotionally.
Here are a few things the referee needs to consider:
1. Mistakes Happen: Even at the Top
Every referee, from grassroots to FIFA level, makes mistakes. The key is learning from them and moving forward. The referee needs to reflect on their decisions, seek feedback (even if it's just from experienced referees or mentors), and use each game as a stepping stone.
2. Handling Dissent and Abuse
Confidence and Presence: The more the referee projects confidence (even when doubting him/herself), the more control they will have.
Firm But Fair: the referee needs to be consistent in his/her decisions, and players will eventually respect him/her for it.
Game Management: Sometimes, a calm word can defuse a situation better than a card. Other times, strong action is needed, so the Referee needs to trust his/her instincts.
3. Pre-Match Anxiety
Feeling anxious before games is normal. Try visualization techniques, controlled breathing, or even light exercise to ease the nerves. Over time, this will improve as the referee gains experience.
4. Lack of Support
It’s frustrating when those above ones aren’t responsive. Try reaching out to fellow referees or looking for alternative mentors. The refereeing community is often supportive, even if official channels aren't.
5. Thinking About Quitting?
Right now, emotions are running high. Don’t decide the heat of frustration. Give it a few more games, focus on small improvements, and reassess later. If, after time, the referee truly feels refereeing isn't for him or her, that’s okay too, mental well-being comes first.
The Referee needs to remember, refereeing is tough, but it also builds resilience. The fact that he or she is reflecting and seeking advice shows that he/she care and want to improve. The referee needs to take things one game at a time, and he or she shouldn't let one rough patch define his or her journey. Let the Referee keep going!
© John Tope OJELEYE
 
Last edited by a moderator:
The Ref Stop
Every single referee has gone through the self doubt you mention. You'll be your own worst critic and second guess yourself after games. My advice is to keep going. Open age football is tough, but the more confidence you portray in your decisions, the more respect (or the closest approximation to it) you'll get. Use your voice. Use your cards. And don't take it personally
 
As you cannot get the support you should from your RDO, speak with one of those who taught you on your course. They should arrange local mentoring support for you.
 
Mate I’m 9 games in.
The absolute stress reffing that first game to now is totally different.
I now hear none of them in my ear for wrong decisions. It goes in and straight out.

I am not on the field to be spoken to in a way I wouldn’t accept in the street. You are going in the book if you do. Walking if done again. Although a double sin bin is worthy of any mouthy players time.

I now stand firmly with my decisions and say. From my angle and viewpoint. That was a foul.


FWIW I made a mistake yesterday. Keeper rushed out and took a player out. DOGSO.
A straight red all day long. But I let play continue and the advantage was a goal.

Yellow given.


Now the crowd were going nuts.

Blew for half time and actually went over and spoke to them. Said that maybe a bit of positivity towards my decisions wouldn’t be a bad thing. Can you imagine hearing what you lot are shouting all the first half.

We had a chuckle. I’m human.

Game finished and the second half was actually very respectful from the crowd.

I am always asked what the score is if it’s a high scoring game. I now tell them I have no clue. The score isn’t important to me. Reffing the game is what I’m here for.
 
I know the score. But it isn’t my job to constantly update everyone with the latest news
That is probably causing unnecessary problems for yourself though. If I as a player asked the referee what the score was and he replied that he had no clue I'd immediately be internally questioning his competence. And some players will seize on that to try to get under your skin and challenge every decision. Also think about how it might look if there is a dispute about the score after the game, not uncommon in high scoring games, and one or both clubs tell the league and / or CFA that the referee said he hadn't got a clue what the score was, it isn't going to reflect very well on you.
 
I know the score. But it isn’t my job to constantly update everyone with the latest news
I get where you're coming from, but easily misinterpreted by a participant as being glib indicating your indifference - or, worse - incompetence.
 
I usually jump at the chance for a little free rapport. DM who has been giving me grief for the last 20 minutes asks how long is life. I'm jumping on that opportunity to say: "11 minutes minimum mate"
 
This is a very long post so not really sure what you are asking…

If you are struggling, have you considered dropping down to do some small sided youth games? Mini-soccer etc. this may help you build confidence and hone your techniques and experience that you can take into some more challenging games. I often think it’s amazing how I succeed in controlling 22+ blokes on a pitch that I have never met before. All comes with experience and little hints and tricks that you pick up along the way.
 
My two penneth's worth of advice, and will try to cover several of your points.

NERVES - I'm worried when I have no nerves at all before a game. I've had a couple of games where I've not been at all nervous (low level youth football) and realised after 10 minutes or so that because of that I wasn't as switched on as I should have been. I still have games where I've got no nerves whatsoever and when that happens I know I need to be super switched on from the start, as the nervous anticipation does that for you so when it's absent I have to compensate.

YOUTH FOOTBALL - However, when the nerves are causing sleepless nights, perhaps one option as well as using various calming techniques would be to start refereeing youth football until you become more confident. Refereeing is hard and so much of your success (or otherwise) will be based on a calm confidence (or lack thereof). I'm about to complete my third season and did a full season of youth football first, and even last year I only did a handful of OA games. This allows you to gain experience, learn and improve but in calmer waters, albeit waters that come with their own challenges (eg parents, adolescents who can't control their emotions etc).

I know others disagree and take the view that you should just dive in at the deep end, but looking back I'd have been woefully out of my depth those first few games if it was all open age. It then turned out that my first non-friendly OA game in year two was a County Cup semi-final (don't ask - **** up on ref allocation left the game without officials 48 hours out!) and whilst I was nervous as hell and was working with NARs for the very first time, because of the 50 plus games I'd reffed at youth level I felt confident that I could do it and whilst it was a challenge I did well (and received priceless feedback from the more-experienced NARs at both half-time and full-time).

OBSERVE - As others have suggested, watch other referees. Go to your local parks football and see what other refs do and you'll learn loads, both what to do and what not to do.

DISSENT - You have to use the tools at your disposal to deal with it, as its the failure to do so that leads to games getting out of hand. Use the stepped approach and use your cards, and if players/coaches/teams refuse to co-operate - like in your example of the player refusing to leave the field of play - threaten to and then follow through on abandoning the game. Again, this comes back to confidence and experience.

I still have games/decisions that I wish I could have back or knock my confidence, and games where the feedback (whether from match day coach, players, coaches, parents) fills you with it.

My advice is to get back on the horse as quickly as possible, whether you chose to do that at youth level or open age. I can't remember who on here said it but the reality is you're never as bad as you/they think you are, nor as good. You will improve with every single game you do, and the fact you're on this site looking for advice and support suggests to me you should stick at it, and trawl this site for the many threads (especially under New Referees, Match Incidents. LOTG and Your Fixtures) that I've found invaluable.
 
This is a very long post so not really sure what you are asking…

If you are struggling, have you considered dropping down to do some small sided youth games? Mini-soccer etc. this may help you build confidence and hone your techniques and experience that you can take into some more challenging games. I often think it’s amazing how I succeed in controlling 22+ blokes on a pitch that I have never met before. All comes with experience and little hints and tricks that you pick up along the way.
I'm really new to all of this still, but this is the route I've decided to take. I've coached youth football for years and feel comfortable around it, so I've decided to stick with this until I feel confident enough to take on the OA games. I know I'm not ready to do that yet so I'm sticking with what I know where I feel my confidence building.
 
Back
Top