Can You Name Some of Them?
Soccer News: Randy Vogt has officiated more than 10,000 soccer games over the past four decades. During this downtime because of the COVID-19 pandemic, why not explore becoming a referee?
We’re all having to take a break from refereeing right now because of the Coronavirus COVID-19. I miss reffing so much that the three dreams I remember during the past few weeks were all about officiating.
So Here Are My Top 10 Great Things About Being a Soccer Referee:
10. Refereeing looks good on a resume, particularly if you just graduated from college. When I graduated from Parsons School of Design in 1984, I thought that I was going to set the advertising world on fire (which never actually worked out exactly that way). But first, I needed to get my first job and had a problem filling up one page on a resume with such little experience. So I added refereeing, and that I had officiated professional games, to the bottom. Turns out that there was an entry-level opening at Manhattan ad agency Sudler & Hennessey, I sent my resume, the boss showed it to a State Referee there who told him, “Hire Randy. Refereeing at such a young age shows maturity.”
9. You learn to remain calm at all times, even if everybody else is negative and upset. Being calm is a very good personality trait to have.
8. You start speaking in foreign languages. The more foreign language words you can speak on the field, the less dissent you will receive in that tongue as players and coaches will be unsure what you understand and what you don’t.
7. You earn some money on the side. Although for nearly every ref in the United States, refereeing is our avocation and the extra money from officiating is nice, although a few top refs have been able to make it their vocation.
6. You learn that it’s not about you but about them (the players). And this is a wonderful attitude to have. Referring above to #7, those who make it about the other person and not themselves will always find work, even much more so than the people who are solely focused on making a living.
5. You learn to manage people. Another thing that is so helpful for that weekend referee earning a living from Monday to Friday as he or she can transfer the items learned in managing players, coaches and even officiating colleagues to the corporate world.
4. You are your own boss and go directly to the customer. There are no intermediaries whatsoever, you sink or swim based on how you do, and you also decide when you can ref in working with assignors.
3. You get (or stay) fit. I have to do a great deal of cardiovascular training, particularly now being 57 years old, to continue to be able to stay up with much younger players in running up and down a soccer field. And all that training has resulted in excellent physicals with my Primary Care Physician, who has said a few times that “you’re going to live to 100.”
2. You expand yourself by leaving your comfort zone. Where there is a risk, there is often a reward. In every game officiated, refs leave their comfort zone as they could be confronted by angry or unhappy players, coaches, and spectators. For those who are able to get through the first couple of years when many new refs quit because of verbal abuse, there is much reward and great satisfaction in working with players and coaches in producing a fair and controlled game.
And the Number One Great Thing About Being a Soccer Referee:
1. You meet the greatest people. So many are my friends, including my closest friends, are players, coaches and fellow referees. Seemingly every few weeks, I am warmly stopped on the street by somebody who remembers that I refereed their game when they played way back when, often calling me by my name, and it feels great to be remembered and know that I have made a positive difference in a person’s life.
During this downtime because of COVID-19, I encourage all those who might be interested to take an online referee certification class with their local state association.
It could be one of the best moves you ever make.