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On the thread about how the referees "stole" game 5 of the WNBA championship, Bigpetunia just wrote this, which I agree with entirely:
Referees/umpires making mistakes is part of every contest, an unfortunate part, to be sure, but an unsurprising part given that they are human. How big a deal it is, of course, in the eye of any given fan, is colored by that fan's specific rooting interest in a particular game. It's just one more aspect of sports that "comes with the territory."
How do we think about referees/umpires?
Are they police and judges who stand apart and above from society and whom we might criticize when we deem their behavior unfair or below the standards of perfect (as in "perfect justice")? If referees/umpires make a mistake that might be perceived as contributing to an outcome, is that "unfair"?
Or are they an integral part of the actual game--a third rail, if you will, along with the two contending teams? That is, do they perform an interactive duty and what they contribute is real time and just as contingent as the play of both teams. They make or do not make a call, and the "other" two teams have to adjust to that reality. Sort of like the "play" of the gods in the Iliad, where the Greeks and Trojans have to adjust to suddenly having a divine presence tilting the battle to one side or the other....
Referees/umpires making mistakes is part of every contest, an unfortunate part, to be sure, but an unsurprising part given that they are human. How big a deal it is, of course, in the eye of any given fan, is colored by that fan's specific rooting interest in a particular game. It's just one more aspect of sports that "comes with the territory."
How do we think about referees/umpires?
Are they police and judges who stand apart and above from society and whom we might criticize when we deem their behavior unfair or below the standards of perfect (as in "perfect justice")? If referees/umpires make a mistake that might be perceived as contributing to an outcome, is that "unfair"?
Or are they an integral part of the actual game--a third rail, if you will, along with the two contending teams? That is, do they perform an interactive duty and what they contribute is real time and just as contingent as the play of both teams. They make or do not make a call, and the "other" two teams have to adjust to that reality. Sort of like the "play" of the gods in the Iliad, where the Greeks and Trojans have to adjust to suddenly having a divine presence tilting the battle to one side or the other....
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