by laxfan25 on Wed Feb 27, 2008 5:34 pm
First of all, from 38 years of experience in the game - fights are fortunately few and far between - I can count them on one hand. In almost all cases they quickly devolve into a wrestling match.
Now the THEORY is - if a fight breaks out the trail official is supposed to turn towards the bench and yell FREEZE!! Anyone then proceeding onto the field is subject to ejection. It's a nice concept. It's also a nice concept that the guy getting hit first just stands there with his hands at his side - I've never seen that either.
Reality says that as soon as the first punch is thrown, the official is doing a double-take - "did I just see that?" and before he can get a whistle to his mouth players are streaming towards the scene of the battle, from on the field and often from the benches. Some are jumping in, others are supposedly trying to play peacemaker, but it can be very difficult for the officials AND the players to determine the motivation for their actions and sometimes misinterpret them.
If players or coaches try to pull anyone out, it would be best that they only do it with their own players, but even that can be problematic. It really is best to treat it like a hockey fight - let the original two roll around and the others stay back.
About all the refs can do is blow their whistles loud and often. That is our only weapon, while these other yahoos have helmets, gloves and sticks!!
There is a much greater liability issue if they get hurt, rather than the players that are fighting. It is not in our charter to plunge in and break up the fight.
This year in Michigan the MHSAA has made it a point of emphasis that the coaches are supposed to turn and freeze their benches, and if they do come onto the field, only handle their own players. Meh, we'll see.
The other challenge as an official is that anyone joining into a fight is supposed to be ejected. They tell us to stand there and write down numbers. Riiight. Again, if you're doing that, you don't know if he is joining the fight or trying to break it up, and there are usually so many people involved it becomes impossible to record them. If I can get to the original two - they're gone, along with any other flagrant participants. (In a playoff game a couple years ago I had the goalie come from the far end all the way to the other attack box just to throw a punch in an existing melee. He was gone.)
Fights are ugly situations. I find it best to try to keep a game well controlled and stay on top of the actions that might precipitate a brawl. Not always possible, but fights are very rare in my games.
Ironically, the biggest one I had was back in '99 or '00. A skirmish broke out, and before I knew it both benches were totally involved. This was one case where I actually got into the middle of the pile trying to calm it down. That was the only time I tried that - it didn't work. After getting things settled down (which took a good while) I just said "Game Over!" and left the field. It was in the 4th quarter. Didn't even try to figure out which of the 40 guys had started it - I was disgusted with both teams.