Showing posts with label OUA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OUA. Show all posts

Sunday, January 17, 2010

January 17, 2010

- For those of you following my ongoing efforts to kick my Coca-Cola habit, here's an update for you. It's been almost 5 months now, and still I haven't had a Coke. Yes, I'm still drinking some pop periodically, but much less...and no Coke. Lately, it's been getting harder and harder. I've almost caved a few times. When we were in Niagara Falls for New Year's, I actually had a bottle of Coke in my hands and was ready to buy it at the store we were in, but my girlfriend talked me out of it. I have a feeling I'm going to break soon.

It's not a factor, but in one of the big ironies of life, one of the presents my girlfriend got me for Christmas was a Coke bottle commemorating the year that Duke won the NCAA Championship for the first time. It's awesome, and has the team logo, and all the games, dates, and scores on the back. It was a great gift, and although it is a bottle of Coke, I'm not tempted at all, since I don't want to know what Coke tastes like after 19 years in a bottle.
- Speaking of Duke, yes...I know that they lost last week, but Carolina lost to Clemson, and that makes me incredibly happy. UNC is now 12-6 on the season, and 1-2 in the ACC. I like it.

- My niece Emma is celebrating her 19th birthday today, and I'm feeling really old. It seems like just yesterday I remember her being born and skipping my afternoon chemistry class with Mrs. Barnes to drive to Toronto in a snowstorm to see her. She's out in British Columbia now, having a great time at school, and writing her own blog. Happy Birthday Ems!

- I've really been enjoying writing for The CIS Blog. If you haven't checked it out yet, make sure to stop by some time...my posts are usually up on Wednesday and on the weekends.

- On Friday night, my girlfriend and I were going to the Guelph Storm game, and since we were planning on having a few...ahem...adult beverages at the game, we didn't really want to drive...so we decided to take the bus. My god, it's been almost 20 years since I've taken the bus, and I realized it when I got on the bus with a crumpled $5 bill (fare is $2.50 now!) and looked for the slot to drop it in, and the bus driver had to instruct me to unfold it and put it in the bill acceptor. Buses have Bill Acceptors now!

I'm old.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

January 5, 2010

As many of you know, I am heavily involved in OUA Basketball, as a fan, announcer, and broadcaster. I just wanted to take a moment to let you know about a new addition to the mix, as I am now writing for The CIS Blog. I will be writing a couple of times a week, specifically on the OUA West. I will be adding a link to the sidebar so that it is easily accessible for anyone interested in reading my analysis of OUA Basketball. The first post went up tonight and there will be another one in the morning. I hope you'll check it out.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

February 20, 2009

(For those of you who don't know, I work as the Public Address Announcer in the OUA for men's and women's basketball. This is a submission I posted to a discussion list that I'm part of)

I feel compelled to post to the list on a topic that has been brewing with me all season. I understand the timing on this may be less than ideal considering the end of the season is fast approaching, but I feel the points are valid nonetheless. While I may refer to specific examples, this issue is based on an overall observation of behaviour throughout the course of the season.

The topic I need to discuss is the scorer's table. As many of you know, I have worked as a public address announcer for close to a decade now, so I've worked with a lot of officials at the scorer's table. And they are just that, officials of the game. These men and women (mostly students) are hard-working and dedicated individuals who work in every arena. It's become painfully apparent that some fans, coaches, players, and others simply don't understand the appropriate and inappropriate ways to interact with the scorer's table.

I'll go on further about that below, but to illustrate my point, I need to share a recent example.

(To the individual who I'm referring to in this anecdote, I've elected to not use your name. The point is your behaviour, not who you are. It's just as relevant if you were a random fan.)

Last week, at a game I was broadcasting for Rogers TV, we were seated beside the visitor's bench, with the fans for the visiting team relatively close behind us. At one point in the game, there was a scoring discrepancy, where the scoreboard operator had inadvertently awarded a basket to the wrong team. One of the visiting team's fans began screaming at the scorer's table, to the point of disrupting the broadcast since it was being picked up on our headset microphones. The coaching staff approached the table to ask, the problem was discovered, the officials were called over, and the game was stopped while the error was corrected. This individual continued screaming at the table the entire time, even while the problem was being fixed. Furthermore, this individual continued to scream (I'm not exaggerating when I say screaming. If you see a tape of the broadcast, you hear every word and the tone and volume.) about other issues that they had with the scorer's table, like yelling at them that the scoreboard wasn't properly displaying the correct players on the floor at that specific time, or yelling `BUZZ THEM!' to end the other team's time out.

I can't state this clearly enough.

This is completely inappropriate.

Human beings make mistakes, they happen. But to scream at people (generally students) at the scorer's table is not the way to handle it. Generally coaches or referees will spot the problem, but in the incredibly rare instance where you are the ONLY PERSON in attendance who has noticed this error (sarcasm fully intended), the proper way to handle it is to inform a coach and they will interact with the scorer's table. Fans interacting with the scorer's table only interferes with their ability to focus on their job for the game, which in turn could lead to more errors. Nobody, including you, wants this.

Now, having given that specific instance, the major point I have, which I've already mentioned, is the treatment of the people at the scorer's table. Some of the problems I've seen would fall under the category of abuse, and some would fall under the category of a simple unawareness of who to deal with.

Examples I've seen recently are (but not limited to):

- Coaching staff or trainers asking the scorer's table for cups, 15 seconds before the game is scheduled to start. Do you really think this is the place to ask? As opposed to Event Staff?

- Coaches being upset that their players weren't buzzed into a game as a substitution when the official scorer didn't know they were waiting to come in since they didn't report to the front of the table. For the record, and I think it's embarrassing that this still needs to be clarified, all players should report to the center of the scorer's table to sub into the game, not crouch down at the end where the scorer can't see you.

- Coaches requesting a time-out and not being awarded the time out since they did not get it in to the scorer's table in time. To blame the scorer's table for a late time-out request is inappropriate. Also, to clarify, the request "Time out if they score" is not a valid request. This is a requested time-out as any other and will be granted on the next eligible stoppage of play. If you want to only call time out if the opposition scores, the smartest thing I've seen coaches do is to stand close to the scorer's table and tell them "I'm going to call a time-out if they score." That way, when the other team scores and you call your time-out, it is heard and awarded promptly. And if there happens to be a stoppage for an out-of-bounds call or something similar, you have not wasted your time-out.

I can't stress it enough, these are officials, and deserve the same respect that would be granted to any other officials. Please keep in mind the effort and dedication that these individuals put forth in each and every game throughout a basketball season. Verbal abuse of any form is completely unacceptable and is quite frankly an embarrassment for anyone who would choose to act in that manner.

As a public address announcer, I'm not an official. I'm just a guy who talks. So if you feel compelled to yell at someone for something, yell at me. Odds are I'll yell back. But at least you aren't interfering with the game. The world won't end if I miss announcing a basket or a foul.

Don't abuse the scorer's table.