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Hockey 101

Hockey 101. A Guide to Off-Ice Officiating. Created by Barry Olson and Kevin Johnson 2009/2011 Rules Updated: 12/2009. General Guidelines. What is the difference between a Referee and a Linesman?. Referee.

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Hockey 101

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  1. Hockey 101 A Guide to Off-Ice Officiating Created by Barry Olson and Kevin Johnson 2009/2011 Rules Updated: 12/2009

  2. General Guidelines • What is the difference between a Referee and a Linesman?

  3. Referee • The “REFEREE” shall have general supervision of the game and shall have full control of all game officials, team officials and players before, during and after the game, including stoppages; and in case of any dispute, their decision shall be final.

  4. Linesman • The duties of the “LINESMAN” are to determine any infractions of the rules concerning off-side play at the blue lines, at the center line, or any violation of the “Icing the Puck” rule • They shall conduct the face-off at all times, except at the start of the game, at the beginning of each period and after a goal has been scored • They shall not stop play to report any penalty except any violation of too many players on the ice and any violation of articles thrown on the ice from vicinity of players’ or penalty bench, and they shall report such violation to the Referee who shall impose a bench minor penalty against the offending team

  5. Off-Ice Officials • The need for off-ice officials varies depending on the level of the competition • Advanced levels of competition (including tournaments) require a larger off-ice staff • Always try to have at least four off-ice officials (six with goal judges)

  6. Dereliction of Duties • On-ice officials have the authority to remove off-ice official(s) from their duties, usually caused by emotional involvement which affects their ability to perform expected duties • Distraction to officiating team or officials • Position must then be filled immediately by a representative from the team who is responsible for appointing the removed individual • Game cannot commence until position is filled

  7. Communications • Communications between on and off-ice officials is vital • Effective communications reflects the competency of the entire officiating team • Address any questions with on-ice officials prior to start of game (Positive rapport) • Do not blow the horn to get an officials attention once the game has started, wait for a stoppage of play

  8. Communications • Do not hesitate to ask for a clarification from the on-ice official (ex. multiple penalties) • Offer your version of an incident only when asked by an on-ice official • Avoid questioning an official’s judgment or showing displeasure with a particular call

  9. Responsibilities • Be courteous and professional at all times • Remain impartial at all times in order to dispel any notions of favoritism and to create a positive playing environment • Serve as a liaison between officials and teams • An extension of the on-ice officiating team • Assist the on-ice crew • Contribute to avoiding conflicts or perceived bias towards one team or the other

  10. Off-Ice Officials Duties Scorekeeping Clock Operation Monitoring Penalty Boxes Announcing

  11. Official Scorer • Secure game roster prior to start of game • No player can be added to the scoresheet once play commences without penalty • Consult on-ice official for instructions • Maximum of 20 players to be listed on scoresheet

  12. Official Scorer • Ensure Head Coach is identified as well as additional team officials (maximum of four) in players box • Ensure CEP number, level, and year obtained are listed on scoresheet

  13. Official Scorer • Ensure Captain and Alternate Captain(s) (maximum of two) are designated on scoresheet next to their name

  14. Official Scorer • Record goals, assists, and penalties as reported by Referee • Be sure to record period goal was scored, time of goal, number(s) of player(s) credited with goal and assist(s) • Record the time based on the amount of time that has expired in the period (ex. clock shows 10:00 remaining in 15:00 period – recorded as 5:00)

  15. Official Scorer • Scoring information shall be recorded for type of goal (ex. (E) empty net, (PP) power play, or (SH) short hand in appropriate box on scoresheet • Once reported by Referee, no changes can be made to who gets credit for goals or assists without approval of the on-ice officials

  16. Official Scorer • Penalties reported by Referee shall be recorded by period, team, player number, type (minor, major, misconduct, etc.) or length (2:00, 5:00, 10:00 etc.), and type of infraction (tripping, holding, hooking, etc.) • Record the time based on the amount of time that has expired in the period (ex. clock shows 10:00 remaining in 15:00 period – recorded as 5:00)

  17. Official Scorer • Work closely with penalty bench attendants to ensure penalized players are released at the appropriate times • Properly communicate penalty expiration situations • A signal such as 10 seconds left on the home team penalty may be used

  18. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • When both teams are at equal on-ice numerical strength, no penalty can expire as the result of a goal • The penalty that expires is the minor or bench minor penalty then being served with the least time remaining on the penalty clock.

  19. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • When a misconduct penalty is called, no time is recorded on clock • It is easiest to write down the time of expiration on a piece of scrap paper to avoid confusion • Penalty cannot terminate due to a goal being scored by opposing team, player must always serve full penalty • When a minor plus misconduct penalty is called against a player, the team incurring the penalty must place an additional player in the penalty box to serve the minor portion of the penalty

  20. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • A major penalty cannot expire as the result of a goal scored • For a major penalty and game misconduct the offending team is not required to immediately place a substitute on the penalty bench and may do so prior to the expiration of the penalty

  21. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • A double minor penalty is always treated as two separate minor penalties, not one four-minute penalty

  22. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • Player is assessed two penalties during the same stoppage of play • Second penalty does not start until the first penalty has expired or terminated as the result of a goal

  23. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • Major and minor penalty assessed to same player • When a player receives a major penalty and a minor penalty at the same time the major penalty shall be served first by the penalized player

  24. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • Two players of same team receive minor penalties • When the minor penalties of two players of the same team terminate at the same time the Captain of that team shall designate to the Referee which of such players will return to the ice first

  25. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • Official is signaling a penalty and opposing team scores • The signaled penalty is written in the scorce book but the player does not serve the penalty • The signaled penalty is assessed but the penalty being served (if applicable) is terminated • One minor penalty terminated is the maximum allowable for one goal scored

  26. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • Two players from same team are serving minor penalties and opposing team scores • Terminate the minor or bench minor penalty with the least time remaining on the clock.

  27. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • Five minor penalties to same player • Any player who incurs five penalties in the same game shall be assessed a game misconduct penalty • Note: Do not tell the referee when players have 3 or 4 penalties

  28. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • Two major penalties to same player • For the second major penalty in the same game to the same player or goalkeeper, that player shall be assessed a game misconduct penalty in addition to the major penalty

  29. Official Scorer Special Penalty Situations • A team incurs fifteen penalties during same game • Any Head Coach whose team receives 15 or more penalties during one game shall be suspended for the next one game of that team.

  30. Official Scorer • At the end of each period and the end of the game, record Goaltender shots on goal and saves

  31. Official Scorer • Keeping track of shots on goal

  32. Official Scorer • Upon conclusion of game, check scoresheet completely for accuracy and neatness • On-ice officials should cross out all portions of scoresheet that have not been used to prevent information from being added at a later date • The scoresheet is not complete until signed by official scorer and on-ice officials

  33. Official Scorer • Distribute a copy to each team after game (White Copy) (Yellow Copy) (Pink Copy) Office Home Team Visitors

  34. Game Timekeeper • Check operation of clock prior to game to insure clock is functioning properly • Place appropriate warm-up time on clock (5 minutes) prior to teams entering ice and start time immediately once both teams have entered ice • Respond to on-ice official’s check prior to start of each period to signal you are ready to start game

  35. Game Timekeeper • Stop and start clock at appropriate times • If for some reason the clock is not stopped or started at the appropriate time, the game timekeeper should immediately do so when brought to their attention • A mental note should be made as to an estimate of how much time elapsed and this time relayed to the on-ice officials at the next stoppage of play

  36. Game Timekeeper • All penalties which require a team to play shorthanded should be placed on the penalty clock • Excludes coincident penalties • Excludes misconduct penalties

  37. Game Timekeeper • When a goal is scored which results in the termination of a penalty appearing on the clock, the game timekeeper shall remove the time prior to play commencing • Shall announce on the public address system at the appropriate time in each period that there is one minute remaining to be played in the period

  38. Game Timekeeper • Ensure horn is sounded at conclusion of each period • Prior to start of third period, research the tournament rules and confirm with on-ice officials as to the use of running time • Running time is only used in the third period

  39. Game Timekeeper • If a six goal differential exists at any time during third period “Running Time” will commence (Check with local association rules) • Stop time will resume if the goal differential is reduced to 4 • Despite the occurrence of running time, penalties will remain the duration prescribed by USA Hockey rules • Clock is stopped only in situations when a goal is scored, a penalty is assessed, there is an injured player, or other unusual delay (rink defect, etc.)

  40. Game Timekeeper • When time has been stopped under these conditions, the clock shall be restarted upon completion of the ensuing face-off • If a stoppage occurs and time elapses of players in the bench box they must wait until play resumes to return

  41. Penalty Bench Attendant • Open and close door for penalized player • Monitor behavior in and around the penalty bench and scorer’s bench • Penalized player must not incite opponent • No obscene or vulgar language • No disrespect to officials (on and off-ice) • Do not allow spectators or officials to harass penalized players

  42. Penalty Bench Attendant • Any unsportsmanlike actions need to be reported to on-ice official during the next stoppage of play • Undivided attention to game in progress • May be asked by official scorer to assist with shots on goal or save count

  43. Public Address Announcer • Verbal communications link between the game official and spectators • Check with representative of each team prior to start of game to pronounce or clarify enunciation of difficult names • Responsible to announce goals, assists, penalties, and other pertinent information as it pertains to the game

  44. Public Address Announcer • Make special announcements • (ex. sportsmanship rules, line ups, etc.) • Announce visiting team information first followed by home team

  45. Public Address Announcer • When announcing goals and assists, it is important to only announce the players who are actually being credited with the goal and assists as reported by the referee (ex. time of goal, number and name of goal scorer, number(s) and name(s) of the player(s) being credited with assist(s) • If the goal was unassisted, announce that

  46. Public Address Announcer • When announcing penalties, the time, team player number and name of penalized player, type of penalty (minor, major, misconduct etc.) and the infraction all need to be announced • At the end of each period, the announcer will announce the score and the shots on goal and/or saves for each team • It is important to stop music (if playing) prior to play resuming

  47. Official Signals • Boarding:Pounding the closed fist of the non-whistle hand into the open palm of the other hand

  48. Official Signals • Butt-Ending:Moving the forearm, fist closed, under the forearm of the other hand held palm down

  49. Official Signals • Charging:Rotating clenched fists around one another in front of chest

  50. Official Signals • Checking from Behind:Non-whistle arm placed behind the back, elbow bent, forearm parallel to the ice surface

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