
6 minute read
The irREFutable Magazine 1 January 2021

An Officials Perspective
January 2021

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The Outcome Business Not The Income Business
An interview with Sara Woods
By Ralph the Ref
Sara Woods is a basketball official who is currently working amateur, collegiate, and semi-pro contests. Based out of St. Louis, Missouri, Woods saw a gap in leadership in her region and decided to create the company Big Game Officials where she recruits, develops and mentors prospective and current officials.

Big Game Officials start out prospective officials from the ages 12-14 on how to become table personnel - working the shot clock, game clock, and becoming score keepers. These initial assignments open the window to a referee’s job. These students soon graduate into a life of officiating. Her recruitment and development of prospective and current officials has achieved the trust and confidence of scouts, assignors, coaches, school administrators, and the community.
We connected with Sara Woods to discuss the Big Game Official journey.
When did you start realizing that lack of mentorship was an issue?
Sara Woods: The more I reached out when I had little to no experience, other officials were reluctant to help me unless I went to a camp and had to pay for it. I found others unwilling to share the knowledge unless I went to camps, which I understand. The higher you go, the more it’s monetized.
Do you think it’s a problem you have personally experienced, or do you think this is systemic?
Sara: I think it’s systemic because not only from a mentor perspective. I have also seen challenges in other organizations that are similar to mine in various organizations. I don’t know if it’s jockeying for position. I’m not sure. I can’t put my finger on it. It’s frustrating.
In sports, you have the affirmation mantra. Teamwork makes the dream work. No matter what you do to make the team, especially those established, they are resistant. So yes, to your point, you are forced to go off and do your own thing.
From the beginning, when do you think that you needed a mentor to help you with this more expediently? More efficient?
Sara: After I completed my first season. After four months, after my first season, I thought I was going to know all the rules and all that I needed to become a great official, but when the season was over, there was only AAU ball - no camps, nobody for me to talk to, I was thinking what do we do? Just walk away, and wait for the next season? There is little to no direction when the season ends. How do I train in the offseason? You complete your last game, go home, and hang up your shoes. There has to be more.
When did you identify that you were a mentor yourself?
Sara: So, after the season, obviously, I didn’t work any postseason, but the NCAA was in town. That’s when I saw NCAA Final Four officials and reached out to one of the officials, and I was invited to a camp, which I thought was very kind. At that point, that was my first experience with a real mentor. My mentor reached out, paved the way for me to get to camp, spent time with me at camp, and followed up after camp. She was always an email or text message away. Then I realized This is what I need. This is what we need to serve the game. I promised myself if I ever got that good, I want to be a mentor like that.
When did you realize that you were going to become a mentor? What were the steps of identifying to become a mentor?
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Proper operating procedures for that everyday Zoom call.
Isn't it backwards that the technology that should be made for those who can’t walk or leave their house is used by perfectly capable human beings, and sometimes animals, that simply do not want to leave their seats?
In 1991, the first web camera was invented to check how much coffee was left in the pot so that students wouldn’t have to get up and check if any coffee needed to be made. There was no sound and the picture was black and white and fuzzy. In 2003, Skype, an internet communication medium that included video, audio, and chat, was founded by Niklas Zennström, and Janus Friis. It gained popularity circa 2007, when Oovoo, another internet communication medium stepped into the scene. At the time, it was innovative and exciting to be able to talk to our peers and see their faces all at once and be in different houses, cites, states, or even countries. Fast forward a few years later to iPhones gaining video chatting capabilities. Not only were we able to see and speak to our loved ones(or not so loved ones) over the phone, but we can be on the go in the process. It was almost as if humanity was fast tracking our technology to the age of the Jetsons. Who would have thought by the year 2020, we’d be so sick and tired of seeing people through a screen? Granted, there are special circumstances that brought us to the point where we are now, however all the development of Oovoo and Skype and the coffee spying video camera prepared us for this moment in time. At this point we should all be pros at the perfect camera angles, the ideal lighting, and the most appealing background when getting on to video chat with someone. Zoom, Google Meet, and FaceTime are the new normal. Believe me when I tell you I am sick of hearing people using that phrase, but that is, in fact, the state of the world we’re currently living in. Unfortunately, much like the debacle of our parents and grandparents taking over Facebook and advising them not to capture the dreaded double chin selfie for their profile picture, it seems as a whole we need to be reminded of proper video chatting etiquette. Here are a few tips, or refreshers, on how to make your 1pm Zoom meeting with your boss the most bearable:

1. Clean up your area
Don’t be the person who everyone’s texting about the pile of dirty clothes and stacked up boxed in their apartment. Unless you live in a frat house or you moved in that day, there’s no reason why you can’t just move some things aside. You don’t even have to clean up. Simply move everything out of view of the camera. But if having a meeting gives you an excuse to clean up, that seems like a win to me.

2. Familiarize yourself with the Zoom before the meeting
Don’t be the person who has an entire conversation with the group and gets upset when people talk over them only to realize that you’ve been on mute the entire time. Find out where your mute button is. Make sure you know how to turn on and off your camera. Most importantly, make sure you know how to dip and dodge right out of that meeting. Know where the hang up, leave meeting, or end call button is in case you need to suddenly have “spotty wifi”.

3. Use a simple background
Let’s assume the mess in your home is entirely too overwhelming to clean up before a meeting. What’s the next best option? Backgrounds. You can create the illusion of being in a wondrous Paris-bound city or the turmoil of a busy metropolitan subway. Is all that really necessary to discuss projections for next quarter? Keep it cute, ya’ll. Don’t overdo it.

