Referee's alleged profanity creates a
stir
Jan 29, 2004
Parents stunned by retort during
game; officials will investigate
By DAVID McNABB / The Dallas Morning News
MESQUITE – Teresa Carey was back on the fourth
row of the middle section of the Mesquite Poteet gym
Wednesday night. She and other parents and fans of Poteet's
girls basketball team still were buzzing about the profanity
they say a referee directed at them during a game against
Mesquite Horn on Tuesday.
"He turned around and said it very distinctly,"
said Carey, whose daughter, Triauna, plays for Poteet.
"And all the little kids went, 'Oooohh.' "
Poteet fans then complained to an on-site school administrator,
which in turn led to referee Floyd Woods being escorted
from the gym and the game suspended at halftime until
Wednesday.
Woods, a veteran referee who has called college games
as well, did not return phone messages from The News,
and on two separate visits by a News reporter, persons
at Woods' home said he was not there.
Steve Mankin, supervisor for the Dallas Basketball
Officials Association, said he was investigating the
incident but couldn't comment.
Several Poteet parents repeated their story Wednesday
that Woods turned toward the stands and used a profanity
as a Horn player was set to shoot a free throw before
halftime of Tuesday's game. The parents said there had
been some yelling at the officials but nothing of a
personal nature.
"He wasn't attacked," Carey said. "Nobody
called him a name."
Said Velma Wommack, whose daughter, Jessica, plays
for Poteet: "Everyone's jaw dropped. We all turned
around to look at each other like, 'Did he just say
that?' "
Mesquite school district officials issued a statement
Wednesday confirming that the administrator –
Poteet assistant principal David Medina – had
acted on the parents' complaints of "inappropriate
exchange between the game official, fans and students."
The statement said the decision to dismiss the referee
was to ensure the integrity of the game.
Medina said he couldn't comment because of school policy.
Elvenn Richardson, Woods' referee partner Tuesday, said
he couldn't comment because of DBOA rules.
The game resumed Wednesday with two new referees and
was completed without incident. Poteet, which led 22-10
when the game was suspended, won, 46-24.
Mankin, the officials' supervisor, said because of
the incident's unusual nature, he didn't know the exact
process that would be followed. He said he'll interview
and request written reports from all officials involved.
Several people connected with officiating and game
management said incidents involving referees are typically
handled differently.
Paul Galvan, a longtime official and former supervisor
with the Southwest Conference who is now Fort Worth
ISD athletic director, said Woods probably should not
have been ejected.
Galvan said he believed the usual procedure would be
for the school administrator to make a complaint to
the Texas Association of Sporting Officials, of which
every referee must be a member.
"They could have gone to the referee and said
they don't want to hear any profanity," Galvan
said, "and then make a report."
TASO assistant director Steven Ellinger said if a school
administrator – routinely assigned to monitor
games – doesn't hear something personally, "it
might not be a good thing for fans to think they can
go say this and get rid of the official."
Ellinger said if the security officers had intervened
first, then it would have been a legal matter and out
of the hands of school officials and referees. He said
there have been complaints made against officials for
inappropriate language in the past, and that TASO has
the power to ban or suspend officials for such language.
Ellinger said it was basic TASO policy that officials
shouldn't interact with fans. "It's just not a
win situation," Ellinger said.
Longtime coaches and officials said it's the first
time they had heard of a referee being ejected.
"I have heard officials and fans get into it,"
Duncanville boys basketball coach Phil McNeely said.
"But I've never seen the official go."
Staff Writer Kate Hairopoulos contributed to this report.
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