Just Joshin' Posted September 6, 2017 Posted September 6, 2017 (edited) What will the excuse be when nothing changes? I agree - will not change anything. What will create change is to fire any ref in the bottom 10 rankings each year. Edited September 6, 2017 by Dalton
Buffalo_Gal Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 Good news. As a bonus, the awful Ed Hochuli is not part of the group. I know he's bad, but I always laugh when I think of one of his roughing the passer calls for Kelly, the "giving him the business" while good old Ed is miming a fist coming down. It is on youtube!
The Frankish Reich Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 Q. You know what NFL "part time" officials made last year? A. About $173,000. Q. What about the captains of the crew, the referees? A. Not clearly known, but thought to be on the order of $500,000 for the Ed Hochulis. The idea that part time officials taking home meager pay was having a negative effect on the quality of officiating made some sense before the strike (and the replacement officials fiasco) caused the NFL to cave. But now? Is the new full-timer going to spend 30 hours a week watching video? Will that really make him better? Or 30 hours a week on company time working out? I think Mr. Hochuli already does way too many curls. This issue should've died a long time ago. The NFL season covers 17 (mostly) Sundays. What will the full timers be doing the other 35 weekends of the year?
The Wiz Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 Q. You know what NFL "part time" officials made last year? A. About $173,000. Q. What about the captains of the crew, the referees? A. Not clearly known, but thought to be on the order of $500,000 for the Ed Hochulis. The idea that part time officials taking home meager pay was having a negative effect on the quality of officiating made some sense before the strike (and the replacement officials fiasco) caused the NFL to cave. But now? Is the new full-timer going to spend 30 hours a week watching video? Will that really make him better? Or 30 hours a week on company time working out? I think Mr. Hochuli already does way too many curls. This issue should've died a long time ago. The NFL season covers 17 (mostly) Sundays. What will the full timers be doing the other 35 weekends of the year? What do players do the other 35 weeks of the off season?
oldmanfan Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 I'd like to see how they'll fill a 40 hour week.
The Wiz Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 I'd like to see how they'll fill a 40 hour week. likely salaried employees. As my boss says, when you're salaried, if you work a minute you worked a day. Granted he usually puts in 11 hour days. Mandatory meeting and travel will cover probably 20 hours of the week. Throw in required professional development, non football related courses and game day (which is likely 8-10 hours) and you get your 40 easy.
Charles Romes Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 Keeiping the game moving is just as important as being correct on the calls.
Roundybout Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 (edited) he makes more money as a lawyer than the NFL could pay probably. he's a partner in his own firm I thought he was a kickboxing instructor or something. Edited September 7, 2017 by GhostsofBillsPast
Prickly Pete Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 (edited) I doubt there will be any noticable difference, or possibly things could get worse. More overly officious jerking. Edited September 7, 2017 by OJABBA
GETTOTHE50 Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 How does this help? The refs are awful, the rule book is difficult to interpret...... yea i have no idea how this makes a difference. the refs blow more calls than not.
klos63 Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 So 21 refs out of 124. They gonna divide then among all games or a crew for however many games a week 21 refs can be divided by. they'll have 1.4 full time refs per game. Should make a world of difference.
nucci Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 they'll have 1.4 full time refs per game. Should make a world of difference. Sarcasm?
DrDawkinstein Posted September 7, 2017 Author Posted September 7, 2017 What will the excuse be when nothing changes? I agree - will not change anything. What will create change is to fire any ref in the bottom 10 rankings each year. I doubt there will be any noticable difference, or possibly things could get worse. More overly officious jerking. Change doesnt happen overnight. But you have to start somewhere. It's a baby step, but at least it is a step, in the right direction. Q. You know what NFL "part time" officials made last year? A. About $173,000. Q. What about the captains of the crew, the referees? A. Not clearly known, but thought to be on the order of $500,000 for the Ed Hochulis. The idea that part time officials taking home meager pay was having a negative effect on the quality of officiating made some sense before the strike (and the replacement officials fiasco) caused the NFL to cave. But now? Is the new full-timer going to spend 30 hours a week watching video? Will that really make him better? Or 30 hours a week on company time working out? I think Mr. Hochuli already does way too many curls. This issue should've died a long time ago. The NFL season covers 17 (mostly) Sundays. What will the full timers be doing the other 35 weekends of the year? This has little or nothing to do about money. The refs may have made that argument when they were trying to get higher wages out of the multi-billion dollar employer. But that isn't the argument we've been making over the years. Look, the NFL can afford to pay these guys and make them full time employees. It's not your money, so what do you care? While they might not have 30-40 hours a week to do during the offseason, there are still things they can be doing. Meeting weekly as an entire officiating department to discuss these vague/complicated rules, and get on the same page as to how/when they call things. Get everyone on the same page to create better consistency. Meet with the teams FOs/Coaches on a regular basis to discuss rules, pass that consistency down, etc. There are plenty of improvements that having these guys around, and dedicated solely to football, will help speed up.
wiskibreth Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 (edited) I don't see how this can be viewed as anything other than a positive move. Dedication to one's craft usually makes for a better product. I hope it grows. Edited September 7, 2017 by wiskibreth
Bangarang Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 I don't think being a full time official means these guys will be working all day watching film, studying the rules and how to make the game better for officials. I don't see anything changing.
nucci Posted September 7, 2017 Posted September 7, 2017 I don't think being a full time official means these guys will be working all day watching film, studying the rules and how to make the game better for officials. I don't see anything changing. it's all for appearance. I don't see how this changes anything
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