Title: An Alpine Official as a Referee
1An Alpine Official as a Referee
- Prepared by Steve Schowengerdt in cooperation
with , Charlie Burnham, Allen Church and Gary
Wright.
2REFEREE FOR ALPINE OFFICIALS
- Sources of Information
- Duties and Responsibilities of the Referee
- During the Race
- Race-Day Scenarios
3Resources and References
- FIS
- ICR
- Precisions
- www.fis-ski.com
- ftp//ftp.fisski.ch
- Rules of FIS Points
- WC COC rules
- Calendar bylaws
- USSA
- Competition Guide
- Competition Calendar
- www.ussa.org
- Division links
- AO Manual
- Race packet
- Division/State Handbooks
4Referees Reference Material
Handout Pages
Glossary of Job Descriptions
Forms
Study Guide and Update
USSA Competition Regulations (ACR)
USSA Course Specifications
USSA Code of Conduct
FIS ICR Precisions
5REFEREE FOR ALPINE OFFICIALS
- Duties and Responsibilities
- of the
- Referee
6Referees Job DescriptionUSSA/FIS 601.4.10
Draws start numbers
Inspects and certifies course
Modifies the course if necessary
Receives start and finish reports
Checks cards for gate faults
Signs and posts the referee report
7Referee A Member of the Jury
- Tenure of the Jury Radios for all
- USSA/FIS 601.4.4 USSA/FIS 601.4.8
- Technical Duties Jury Minutes
- USSA/FIS 601.4.6.1 USSA/FIS 601.4.5.4,
601.4.5.5 - Organizational Duties Course Inspection
- USSA/FIS 601.4.6.2 603.7.4 / 614.3 (new)
- USSA/FIS DH 703.2
- USSA/FIS SL 804.1 (see 614.3)
- USSA/FIS GS 904 (see 614.3)
- USSA/FIS SG 1004 (see 614.3)
- Disciplinary Duties
- USSA/FIS 601.4.6.3
8Equipment Rules
- USSA/FIS Additional rules
- Ski Stand Height
- Ski Boot Height
- Ski Radius
- Ski Profile Length
- Ski Length
- Helmets required for USSA and FIS
- DH, SG, GS, SL
- Competitors and Forerunners
9WHO IS AUTHORIZED TO CHANGE THE COURSE
- USSA/FIS 601.4.10
- Referee may take out or add gates.
- If alone, Referees decision is final.
- Referee must inform the Course Setter of such
changes.
10NON-ESSENTIAL COURSE CHANGES
- USSA/FIS 614.1.5
- In cases of immediate non-essential but necessary
changes on the course, such as small removals of
gates - An additional inspection or training run is not
necessary. - Details must be communicated to all Team Captains
and competitors must be informed by the Referee
at the start. (Start Referee)
11REFEREE FOR ALPINE OFFICIALS
12Start Referee Jury Advisor at the Start
Job Duration USSA/FIS 601.3.3
Reruns USSA/FIS 623
Reports to Referee the Jury USSA/FIS 601.3.3,
613.7
No advantage, No DSQ USSA/FIS 223.3.3
Supplies reserve bibs 601.3.3
13Rules of the Start USSA/FIS 611.2.1.1, 613
- Delayed Start Not present when called to start
sanction which could include DSQ! - USSA/FIS 613.6
- Valid/False Start In the Gate DNS within
allowed time - disqualified - USSA/FIS 613.7
14START STOP!USSA/FIS 705.5
- On command, Start Referee closes start
- Start Referee states via Jury radio
- Bib of last competitor started
- Bib of competitor held at start
- START STOP confirmed,
- number 24 on course, number 25 at the start
15START STOP, YELLOW FLAG STOP
- In order to stop competitor(s) already on course,
- Jury member calling
- START STOP
- is responsible for calling
- START STOP, YELLOW FLAG STOP!
-
16WHEN A START STOP or START STOP/YELLOW FLAG
STOP IS CALLED
- Ski Patrol assigned to the event and in radio
contact with the Jury, is now on alert that a
competitor may require medical assistance. - If the Jury / Eyes of the Jury / Jury Advisor
call for medical assistance, Ski Patrol assigned
to the event first verifies that the course is
clear, i.e. no racer is on course, - Once Ski Patrol assigned to the event has
verified that it has a clear course, it responds
to the call for medical assistance. - SKI PATROL ASSIGNED TO THE EVENT -
- NOT COACHES / TRAINERS / OFFICIALS / PARENTS -
- ARE THE FIRST RESPONDERS!
17REOPENING THE COURSE
- The individual (Jury member, eyes of the Jury or
Jury Advisor) who called the START STOP or
START STOP, YELLOW FLAG STOP is responsible for
releasing the course hold. - The course is reopened at the direction of the
Jury either from top to bottom, bottom to top or
from the position where the incident requiring
the START STOP occurred. - The Technical Delegate is responsible for
confirming that all Jury members, Jury Advisors,
and Eyes of the Jury have reviewed and are aware
of start stop and start stop/yellow flag stop
procedures.
18Report by the Referee This form must
be completed for each classification gender for
each runPosted on Scoreboard/ Official Notice
Board with date and time of posting as well as
expiration timeShould be checked by Team
Captains regardless of whether or not they feel
one of their competitors may have committed a
fault (DSQ)Protest period is 15 minutes!
PARK CITY, UTAH USA
1234
AMERICAS RACE 25
DEC 10 FIS MEN
SLALOM
5 McBride, Brett USA 12 J.
Wilson Straddle
101
2 7 22 34
1500 1515 25.12.10
S/REFEREE
19WHAT IS DUE PROCESS?
- Due process is "the conduct of legal proceedings
according to established rules and principles for
the protection and enforcement of private rights,
including notice and the right to a fair hearing
before a tribunal with the power to decide the
case." - The Jury shall provide the athlete a full and
complete opportunity to present his or her side
of the case before imposing any sanction
including disqualification.
20Finish Referee Jury Advisor at the Finish
Job duration USSA/FIS 601.3.4
Knows rules of finish USSA/FIS 615
Supervises finish controller, timing and
crowd USSA/FIS 601.3.4
Communicates with start USSA/FIS 611.1, 601.4.8
Determines valid finishes USSA/FIS 615.3
Ensures protection is on timing
equipment USSA/FIS 611.2.1, 615.1.4
- Reports to Referee Jury
- USSA/FIS 615.4
21REFEREE FOR ALPINE OFFICIALS
22Race-day Scenarios Part I
Four hairpins but not a flush in sight USSA/FIS
803.2
- Seed points of top 8 significantly lower than
- rest of the field. What can jury do?
- USSA/FIS 621.3
Jury cant find an applicable rule. What should
the jury do? USSA/FIS 601.4.7
A coach reports that ski stack height is too
high. What can you do? What is the fee? USSA/FIS
641.1, 644
23Race-day Scenarios Part II FLIP 30 is
Standard
Pl Bib 1 3 2 4 3 15 4 10 5 11 6 1 7 2 8 17 9 5 10
6 11 9 12 7 13 8 14 30 15T 25 15T19
- St Bib
- 1 19
- 2 25
- 30
- 8
- 7
- 9
- 6
- 5
- 17
- 2
- 1
- 11
- 10
- 15
- 4
- 3
Flip 15 instead of 30 USSA/FIS 621.11.2
First run tie at flip position. What do we
do? USSA/FIS 621.11.3
24Race Day Scenarios Part III
Minimum/Maximum number of gates DH
USSA/FIS 701 GS USSA/FIS 901.2.4 SL
USSA/FIS U801.2.4, 801.2.4 SG USSA/FIS
U1001.3.4, 1001.3.4
Minimum direction changes for both FIS and
USSA FIS SL and SG gate count calculations are
different than USSAs
Minimum DH start interval USSA/FIS 622.2.3
Racer misses start and requests
provisional USSA/FIS 613.6, 623.3
25Race Day Scenarios Part IV
START STOP is called over the radios. What is
happening now? USSA/FIS 705.5
Three electronic timers but no hand timing. What
do you do? USSA/FIS 611.2.2
Required vertical drop cant be met. Will race
score? USSA U706.2.2 U801.1.3, U801.1.4
U901.1.3, U901.1.4 U1001.1.3 USSA Application
Vertical Drop, Minimum Time and Minimum
Penalties FIS If exception not granted by FIS,
vertical drop requirements must be met or race
will not score!
26Race Day Scenarios Part V
- A racer commits a gate fault
- His racing speed carries him over Finish Line
- The racer hikes back over the line and completes
passage of the missed gate - WHEN WAS HIS TIME TAKEN?
- USSA/FIS 611.3.1
- WHAT IS HIS STATUS?
- USSA/FIS 661.4, U629.4
27Welcome to the USSA Alpine Officials Referee
program
Thanks for your efforts in helping USSA Alpine
Officials provide events that are fun and fair
for all competitors!