Coaches, players and fans - other than the ones who officially never see a foul against their side - “get” the difference between a hold, a shove and a hack, without the official playing Charades for them out in front of the table. Similar imagination is applied to illegal use of hands where the chop is above the shoulder if the foul occurred on a shot attempt, but down near the thigh when committed on a dribble. Others hold the fist in front of the chest or down at their waist. Why, then, do so many officials impart their own versions of holding, pushing or illegal use of hands? For holding, some grasp the wrist below a clenched fist beside the shoulder like they’re supposed to. Could you imagine officials acting out the individual traveling offense by throwing themselves on the floor, rolling over and standing up? Nope, everyone gets what traveling is. Nonetheless, there’s only one signal for traveling. A player could travel by dribbling after raising a pivot foot, taking five steps on a layup, rolling over with the ball while on the floor - the list goes on. Officials who manipulate signals to their own personal style don’t create a following like actors more often, they create suspicion: Does the official want to be noticed, apply the rules differently, need to justify his or her actions more, or not care that much? Any time a participant can look at an official and ask, “What’s the deal?” it defeats the homogeneity of the crew, causes division and ultimately reduces the upward mobility of the person wearing the striped uniform.Ī unique aspect of the basketball rules is there are a limited number of violations and fouls, but many ways to commit each one. A way of doing that would be by going “off the script.” There are tall and short, skinny and fat, male and female officials, of course, but beyond their physical traits, the game wants no inkling that they’re judging differently by behaving differently. In order to portray their impartiality, they’re expected to apply the rules and run the game the same as every other official as much as possible. The difference is they’re expected to play the role as indistinguishably as they can. This is text in the rule and mechanics books. In basketball, officials are given the same script, too. Despite the fact everyone trying out has the same lines to read, each actor makes his or her own attempt to make it memorable and differentiate himself or herself from everyone else.
Either way, the producer is looking for the most compelling presentation of how he or she wants it to be viewed and selects the person best for the job, based on some expectations. Sometimes, they read the script “cold,” while other times they get it in advance and can work out how they wish to portray it.
Candidates are competing for a role in a production and are given some portion of the script to read. Many of us have some idea of how casting calls work for movie or TV parts. By that standard, we have something in common with real actors in how we ply our trade and involve the audience. Like it or not, we officials are on a stage of sorts, playing a role and contributing to the production.