Why it wasn't the Ref's fault
Roderic Yapp
Director - Leadership Capital. Creating the Conditions for Execution.
Two weeks ago, there was an incident during the Liverpool vs Tottenham game. A goal was scored which was then checked by VAR and incorrectly ruled to have been offside. The referee disallowed the goal and Liverpool went onto lose the game.?
Writing about these events immediately after the fact isn’t helpful. The conversation is usually highly emotive making it hard to be objective. As a Liverpool fan, this might be a point I am making to myself.
A few days after the event, PGMOL (the organisation that manages professional referees and officials) released the voice recording of the exchange between the VAR team and the referee. I think they did that in the interest of transparency, they’d stated that it was down to human error, and I think they wanted to make that clear. Football is incredibly tribal, so I suspect they wanted to kill the potential argument that this was a deliberate act of favouritism.?
When I listened to the audio, what struck me was how hard it was to understand what was being said over the radios. The communication was cluttered, the word ‘mate’ seemed to come after every statement. The technician who noticed that there had been an error asked if the decision-maker was happy with the decision when it was clear they’d got it wrong. It sounded like the decision-maker wasn’t concentrating on what he was saying… probably because he was trying to do something else although I am speculating here as there was no accompanying video. What is clear is that he wasn’t paying attention to what the technician was saying.
I appreciate that I am writing this with the benefit of hindsight which is always 20:20. I have worked with the match officials at PGMOL and I know they’re good people trying to do a very challenging job under enormous scrutiny and pressure. I’d argue that a Premiership Referee gets more scrutiny over their decisions than some Secretary’s of State but that’s a different article.
So what can we learn from this event? How can we prevent these sorts of things from happening again? And how might this event be applicable to your organisation??
VAR is relatively new so there is an element of learning that needs to take place. I think one of the areas that needs to be addressed is that of voice procedure when talking on a radio. We assume that these things are like mobile phones, they’re not, they work differently and consequently we have to use them differently.
When communication is made harder, as it often is on a radio network when you’re surrounded by thousands of fans, you need to communicate differently.
In the Corps we used to use the pneumonic, CLAP, ‘Clear, Loud, Audible, with Pauses’. Using words like ‘mate’ was described as ‘bad voice procedure’ and you would get corrected on it. What I mean by that is someone would tell you not to do it, you’d learn and get better.
Passing a message to someone is like a baton change in a relay, you have to be confident that they have received it. The responsibility for passing the message lies with person sending it. They need to be confident that the message has landed. One of the easiest ways you can do this is by testing what the receiver has heard by getting them to play it back to you.
In the Corps, we used to use the shorthand term ‘roger’ on a radio to mean that the message had been understood. If you didn’t understand or hear the message correctly, you’d make that point and say something like ‘say again all after (whatever you last heard)’. If you didn’t hear ‘roger’ back, you had to assume that the message had not been passed and keep trying to get it through.
These simple behaviours were reinforced using standardised language. NATO has set of mission verbs that make it explicit what a military unit is being asked to do. It works at all levels from section (eight Royal Marines) all the way up to brigade and beyond.
To ‘destroy’ something is to do exactly what it says but it’s not that often used in mission statements. In my career in the Royal Marines, we used to use the word ‘disrupt’ far more often which means ‘prevent your enemy from achieving their mission/aims’. That might mean destroy them, but it also allows for you to be creative, can you get them to surrender using an overwhelming force that gives them no other option? That would achieve the mission without the use of deadly force which is usually preferable.
This standardisation of language minimises the chances of messages being misunderstood. It creates an environment of absolute clarity. You hear it in submarine films when the Captain leaves the control room. He says ‘XO, you have the con.’ In response the Executive Officer will playback, ‘Aye Captain, I have the con.’ He sends the message, and he receives confirmation that the other person has understood it.
Last week, I worked with a team to help them define one of their most important processes. As the process continued it became obvious that there were handovers between team members. We created clarity on the stages of the process but more importantly, who was the ‘supporting’ and ‘supported’ lead at different stages of the process. This helped to define accountability and ownership, not to catch people out but to create clarity.
This isn’t really about PGMOL, it is about improving communication. Every single person has communication as a strength on their CV. If that was really true, there would be very little miscommunication and I think most of us know that isn’t the case.?
One of the basics of Organisational and team performance is clarity. What can you take from this article to help create just a bit more clarity in your organisation?
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Tim Pointer - thank you for your input and for helping me recognise that there was something here to write about!
Mike Davis-Marks - hopefully I have the submarine terminology correct!
Jamie Weaver CMgr FCMI GCGI - hopefully I have the VP elements correct but I am sure you have some principles to add that will be useful. Good to see you walking the dog in the dark this morning!
Night Manager at Carden Park Hotel - Cheshire's Country Estate
1 年When the crowd here the conversation or can see the replay...but then again that's Rugby not Football as has been said many times before... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GsFMGWS0yNo
????????????. Director - Will Shine Windows: Clients Cleaning Solutions.
1 年To be fair, these types of decisions are actually made in most PL games, annoyingly.. Do the Officials ever learn from these persistant irritating mistakes to correct them ??. Over the past, clearly not??.. However, as we all controvertially know, one Big issue here - VAR. Why oh why was it introduced ??.. Im a Spurs fan, wev'e had severe ups and downs, hopefully this is at long last COYS.. Obviously, glad we won, to Klopp's clear frustation. Could you imagine having to re play, Wrong games ????.. The PL fixture's are congested enough according to some Managers..couldnt agree more.. No, its not the Ref's issue ( theyve been a scapegoat) , their simply aided then have to consult other implemented methods to potentially re decide.. The time wasting, frustration, apparent poor or good decisions, the list can accrue..easily. The solution = Abolish VAR, for good. 2 non biased linesmen and the referee. For the better.
Business Development Manager at SA Group
1 年Spot on mate with the VP. Obviously in our old line of work if we made mistakes in the worst case scenario lives could have been lost. In this case its resulted in VAR coming under a significant amount of scrutiny. There has been a valuable lesson learnt here. The solution is to minimise the risk of this happening again...give the referees proper voice procedure training. One times former Signals Instructor standing by if required Roderic Yapp ??
Chief Executive STEP – Advising Families Across Generations
1 年Very thoughtful observations Roderic Yapp. Really important message about communication here. My less helpful one is that as a Spurs fan I was delighted with the mess and I totally understand why it might have taken a little while to gain perspective….
Director - Leadership Capital. Creating the Conditions for Execution.
1 年Jeremy Snape, Matthew Syed - I appreciate it's not taking the principles of sporting excellence and applying them to the commercial world but hopefully there is an insight in here that you find useful!