wisconsin swimming officials committee rev. oct 2013
TRANSCRIPT
Overview
Welcome/Introductions/Purpose General Guidelines Lead/Lag Protocol Strokes
Butterfly Backstroke Breaststroke Freestyle IM Relays
Welcome
Introductions Name Club Motivation
Paperwork Background Check Registrations Release of Contact Info Manuals/Rule Books/Readings/DVD
General Guidelines
Purpose of Officiating To insure fair competition among all swimmers
by assuring compliance with the rules for competitive swimming and to treat each swimmer equally under those rules.
Be Competent Know the rules. Ask for clarifications. Review rules and officiate often (nothing
trumps deck time) Be professional
Looking like you know what you are doing makes people think you know what you’re doing
General Guidelines Meet Officials
Meet Referee Administrative Official Administrative Referee Head Chief Judge Deck Referee Starter Stroke/Turn Officials
Levels of Certification N1 – LSC Certification N2 – Evaluation required N3 – Initial and final evaluations required
General Guidelines
Jurisdictions “Assigned area of responsibility” Determined by the Meet Referee in
conformance with USA Swimming guidelines. Stroke Judge: Generally wall-to-wall (may be
different as assigned by the Referee or Head Chief Judge)
Turn End Judge: Last arm pull-to-first stroke (may be given flag-in stroke duties as assigned by the Referee or Head Chief Judge)
General Guidelines
Jurisdictions Start End/Finish Judge: From the start until
swimmer surfaces, and last stroke into the finish
Relay Take-off Judge: Relay take-offs only for assigned lanes
Do not attempt to officiate outside of your jurisdiction
General Guidelines When a Violation Occurs
Immediately raises one hand overhead, palm open Required by the rules Do your thinking AFTER this signal EXCEPTION: Relay exchanges; after last swimmer of
the heat leaves Record the infraction
On the heat sheet (if supplied one) On the DQ slip (if writing own DQs)
Event, heat, lane, name/team, and infraction(s) Sign the slip
Report the infraction to the referee Over the radio Through the Chief Judge
General Guidelines Be prepared to answer three questions:
Where were you? Be in the correct position to make the call Head over the water or straight down the wall for
turns At or just behind the swimmers hips for strokes
What did you see? Be able to describe what you saw (without using
motions) Which hand touched first? When did the swimmer submerge before the finish?
What rule was broken? Know the rules (not by number) Use rule book language Refer all questions from the coaches to the Deck or
Meet Referee
General Guidelines
Do not be offended if the Referee or Chief Judge over-rules your call
If you think you saw an infraction; you didn’t You need to know you saw an infraction and
what rule it violated Ugly swimming is not necessarily illegal The swimmer always gets the benefit of the
doubt We are casual observers of the meet,
noting infractions of the rules We are not looking for infractions
General Guidelines Be aware of deck balance
Mirror the deck Watch all assigned lanes all of the time
Even when no swimmer is swimming Turn officials position
Over the lane As assigned by the Meet Referee/Head Chief
Judge Stroke official position
Behind hips of slowest assigned swimmer Except Freestyle: Stationed at 15m mark
Whistle Protocol
Lead/Lag Protocol
Paired with another stroke official Never closer than six feet Break swimmers into two groups
Take the group closest to your wall Never go past your opposite flags Never cross your partner
Butterfly Start The forward start shall be used.
“An entry made while facing the course” Platform: At least one foot in the forward half
of the block Deck: At least one foot at the edge of the deck Pool: At least one hand on the wall Swimmer must be certified by his/her coach to
start from the blocks
Butterfly Stroke After the start and after each turn, the
swimmer’s shoulders must be at or past the vertical toward the breast.
The swimmer is permitted one or more leg kicks, but only one arm pull under water, which must bring the swimmer to the surface.
It shall be permissible for a swimmer to be completely submerged for a distance of not more than 15 meters (16.4 yards) after the start and after each turn.
By that point, the head must have broken the surface.
Butterfly Stroke
The swimmer must remain on the surface until the next turn or finish.
From the beginning of the first arm pull, the body shall be kept on the breast.
Both arms must be brought forward over the water and pulled back simultaneously. The entire length of the arm must break the
placid surface of the water Arm: Wrist to shoulder
Butterfly Kick
All up and down movements of the legs and feet must be simultaneous.
The position of the legs or the feet need not be on the same level, but they shall not alternate in relation to each other.
A scissors or breaststroke kicking movement is not permitted.
Butterfly Turns At each turn the body shall be on the
breast. The touch shall be made with both hands
separated and simultaneously at, above, or below the water surface. Need not be in the same plane
Once a touch has been made, the swimmer may turn in any manner desired.
The shoulders must be at or past the vertical toward the breast when the swimmer leaves the wall. Watch the feet leave the wall, then check
shoulders for body orientation
Butterfly Finish
At the finish, the body shall be on the breast and the touch shall be made with both hands simultaneously at, above, or below the water surface. Hands need not be in the same plane
Backstroke Start
The swimmers shall line up in the water facing the starting end, with both hands placed on the gutter or on the starting grips.
Standing in or on the gutter, placing the toes above the lip of the gutter, or bending the toes over the lip of the gutter, before or after the start, is prohibited.
Backstroke Stroke The swimmer shall push off on his back
and continue swimming on the back throughout the race.
Some part of the swimmer must break the surface of the water throughout the race, except it is permissible for the swimmer to be completely submerged during the turn, and for a distance of not more than 15 meters (16.4 yards) after the start and after each turn.
By that point, the head must have broken the surface of the water.
Backstroke Turns Upon completion of each length, some
part of the swimmer must touch the wall. During the turn the shoulders may be
turned past the vertical toward the breast after which an immediate continuous single arm pull or an immediate continuous simultaneous double arm pull may be used to initiate the turn.
The swimmer must have returned to a position on the back upon leaving the wall.
Watch the feet leave the wall, then check shoulders for body orientation
Backstroke Finish
Upon the finish of the race, the swimmer must touch the wall while on the back.
“The moment of touching the end of the course.”
Breaststroke Stroke After the start and after each turn when
the swimmer leaves the wall, the body shall be kept on the breast.
It is not permitted to roll onto the back at any time.
Throughout the race the stroke cycle must be one arm stroke and one leg kick in that order.
All movements of the arms shall be simultaneous and in the same horizontal plane without alternating movement.
Breaststroke Stroke The hands shall be pushed forward
together from the breast on, under, or over the water.
The elbows shall be under water except for the final stroke before the turn, during the turn and for the final stroke at the finish.
The hands shall be brought back on or under the surface of the water.
The hands shall not be brought back beyond the hip line, except during the first stroke after the start and each turn.
Breaststroke Stroke During each complete cycle, some part of
the swimmer’s head shall break the surface of the water.
After the start and after each turn, the swimmer may take one arm stroke completely back to the legs.
The head must break the surface of the water before the hands turn inward at the widest part of the second stroke.
Breaststroke Kick After the start and each turn, a single
butterfly kick, which must be followed by a breaststroke kick, is permitted during or at the completion of the first arm pull. First arm pull begins with observable separation
of the hands A pause after the separation of the hands is not
a violation Following which, all movements of the legs
shall be simultaneous and in the same horizontal plane without alternating movement.
The feet must be turned outwards during the propulsive part of the kick.
Breaststroke Kick A scissors, flutter or butterfly kick is not
permitted except as provided herein. Breaking the surface of the water with
the feet is allowed unless followed by a butterfly kick.
Breaststroke Turns & Finish
At each turn and at the finish of the race, the touch shall be made with both hands simultaneously at, above, or below the water level. Need not be in the same plane
The head may be submerged after the last arm pull prior to the touch, provided it breaks the surface of the water at some point during the last complete or incomplete cycle preceding the touch
Freestyle Stroke In an event designated freestyle, the
swimmer may swim any style, except that in a medley relay or an individual medley event, freestyle means any style other than butterfly, breaststroke or backstroke.
Some part of the swimmer must break the surface of the water throughout the race, except it shall be permissible for the swimmer to be completely submerged during the turn and for a distance of not more than 15 meters (16.4 yards) after the start and each turn.
By that point the head must have broken the surface.
Freestyle Finish
The swimmer shall have finished the race when any part of his person touches the wall after completing the prescribed distance.
Individual Medley (IM) The swimmer shall swim the prescribed
distance in the following order: the first one-fourth, butterfly; the second one-fourth, backstroke; the third one-fourth, breaststroke; and the last one-fourth, freestyle.
Forward start Strokes are according to individual stroke
rules Turns
Within a stroke treated as a turn for that stroke
Transitioning between strokes treated as the finish of the first stroke
Finish at end of distance
Relays Four swimmers Each swimmer swims one-fourth of the
prescribed distance Each stroke is swum according to the
rules of the stroke In relay races a swimmer other than the
first swimmer shall not start until his/her teammate has concluded his/her leg “Start” means leaving the blocks/wall
Each relay team member shall leave the water immediately upon finishing his/her leg, except the last member
Relay Take-off Judge
Relay take-off Cover assigned lanes with partner Watch waiting swimmer until leaves
wall/blocks Look for touch of incoming swimmer Notate the take-off (DO NOT raise hand) Do not confer with partner until all assigned
exchanges are complete “I have a potential early take-off”
Partner will answer with their early take-offs (if any)
Dual confirmation results in a DQ
Place Judge
Place Judge Position on side of the pool Cover all lanes Note as many as you can Record a tie if indistinguishable Results used to resolve timing discrepencies
Chief Judge
Act as mentor to other judges Verifies all deck calls
“What did you see?” “What rule was violated?” “What is your jurisdiction?” “Where were you?” Recommend judgment to referee
Communicates between deck judges and: Referee Announcer Swimmers
Head Chief Judge
Communicate with all deck officials before meet
Assign positions Conduct the official’s briefing Manage officials’ equipment
Radios Clipboards Paperwork
Complete DQ slips
Other Points - General Rule Violations
Unsportsmanlike conduct (102.10.3) Using objects for propulsion
Lane dividers (ropes) (102.10.11) Bottom of pool (during freestyle, swimmer
may stand) (102.10.5) Fins, etc. (102.10.10)
Interference (102.10.6 and 102.10.7) Not completing the distance prescribed Using watches or timing/pacing devices
Other Points - Suit Rules
We are not the swimsuit police General specs
Men: Navel to knee Women: Collarbone to knee
One suit only “Modesty” garment
Exceptions must come from USA-S national chairman
Report infractions to the referee
Other Points - Performance
Attend and participate in all meet-related meetings assigned
Uniform (general; may be different per meet): Plain white polo-style shirt Plain shorts/slacks/skirts
Navy blue (USA-S/YMCA/NCAA) White (WIAA)
White socks White rubber-soled shoes (not Crocs or
similar) Control your emotions Admit and correct your mistakes
Other Points - Equipment
Buy multiple shirts/bottoms Bring extra socks (you will get wet) Radios
Any walkie-talkie style with multiple channels Target Scheels
Good headset NOT for use with cell phones Many styles Scheels hunting
Some teams provide radios; don’t count on it
Other Points - Attitude
Swimming is merely a sport; it is not life-and death
Take officiating seriously You are in a position of authority: Act like
it And remember, the benefit of the doubt
always goes to the swimmer
What’s Next
Complete Level 2 Background Check (every two years) Complete On-line Athlete Protection Course (annually) USA-S Membership Take on-line tests for Stroke & Turn Judge Apprentice
4 sessions (2 or more meets; 2 or more mentors—signed card) Establish relationships with other Officials
Especially “Lead” officials Volunteer often everywhere Re-cert
USA-S Non-Athlete Membership and APT - Every Year USA-S Official: Refresher clinic or online re-cert test – Prior to
the beginning of every even-numbered year YMCA Official: Every three years