Youthful whistle blowers
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Bryce Alderton
Several soccer players in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are getting to
view the game they love from a different perspective these days: that
of an official.
Ten players, ages 10-14, spent the weekend of Dec. 27-29
officiating more than 90 games of the Costa Mesa Classic, an AYSO
Region 120 tournament held at TeWinkle School and the Farm Complex.
Mike Gordon, a Newport Beach resident and volunteer referee
trainer for Region 97, mentored the students and hopes to increase
the interest among Newport-Mesa’s soccer aficionados to grab a
whistle.
“In this area [similar attempts to begin programs like this]
haven’t been successful,” Gordon said. “The goal is to get a group of
kids who want to learn to do it and to motivate them.”
Some do it for community service hours required by high schools.
Others patrol the sidelines to try something different and get a
better appreciation of the game. AYSO is a nonprofit organization run
by volunteers.
“Since I started playing soccer [four years ago] I got kind of
interested in how the [referees] do it,” said Otoniel Garcia, who
officiated 14 games of the Costa Mesa Classic. “A lot of people I
know began telling me about it and wanted to see me doing it.”
Garcia, 14, a freshman at Newport Harbor High, plays defense for
his club team. He noticed the responsibility level rise a notch when
he officiated his first game three months ago.
“It’s weird to see the field from side-to-side,” Garcia said.
“When I play defense, I only see the side I’m on. It’s amazing how I
can see the whole field.”
Garcia referees boys and girls under-10 games when needed and said
he receives community service hours for the work.
“I try to focus on what I’m doing and don’t get distracted,”
Garcia said. “It gets difficult because the parents are screaming at
you. But it doesn’t really matter what they think. I ignore it if it
comes.”
Robby Gordon, Mike’s 14-year-old son, called his first soccer game
in the Pilot Cup -- the annual youth soccer tournament held at the
Farm Complex -- two years ago. A defender on his club team, he said
knowing the rules helped make the transition to refereeing a little
easier.
“My friends started doing it and it was fun to do something for
the community,” Robby Gordon said. “I know what it feels like when
you have been cheated by the ref.”
Other players who officiated tournament games include Jhovany
Hernandez, Noe Gonzales, Andrew Dinh, Will Reichenstein, Julian
Hernandez, Jeremy Anish and Adrian Buonanoce.
Whatever the motivation, Mike Gordon, who referees more than 200
AYSO, high school and club games a year, took it upon himself to
prepare these soccer students for refereeing games.
Mike Gordon, 42, never played soccer, but began refereeing seven
years ago. He said there is always a shortage of officials for games.
“One day I showed up and there were no referees and two or three
games had started,” he said.
Mike Gordon trains both adults and children in groups as small as
three or four to as large as 20.
Eight to 10 hours of classroom instruction is followed by a 50- to
100-question, multiple-choice test and, finally, the field exam,
where students rotate in-and-out of a game.
“The referees get to position themselves on the field and see how
to work with an assistant,” Mike Gordon said. “It also gets them
running the field in proper diagonal patterns. By the end of the
game, they are much better than they were at the beginning. They have
to want to be there.”
They meet at a convenient time and place -- usually weekends at
places such as the park at Mariners Library. Other times Mike Gordon
has trained students at his home.
“The kids tend to have less apprehension than the grown-ups,” he
said. “They know the game and can see it from the ref’s point of
view. Hopefully, we will get to a better level of [officiating] and
they will pick it up really quick.”
Once the students complete the training, they receive a regional
badge. Mike Gordon said other training is offered for those who want
to officiate on the national level.
“It’s a job a lot of people don’t want to do,” he said. “These
guys could be as experienced as I am by their young 20s and
[refereeing Los Angeles] Galaxy games. They have youthful legs. We
need more experienced refs. There is always a shortage of refs.”
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