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The Unwritten Contract of the Piste: What Referees and Fencers Expect from One Another

Shin A. Lam (right), the embodiment of what happens when a referee fails to live up to expectations. Image courtesy of Wikimedia.
Shin A. Lam (right), the embodiment of what happens when a referee fails to live up to expectations. Image courtesy of Wikimedia.

When a bout transpires, there is a certain decorum that a fencer expects from the referee, and vice versa, what a referee expects from a fencer in order for the bout to be held in a safe, fair, and fun manner—while honoring Fencing’s values of honor and respect from fencer to fencer, fencer to referee, and referee to fencer.

At some point in his/her career, every fencer has had a referee who enforces the rulebook as if it were the 1980’s and not the 21st century. On the outside of the piste, every referee has had a fencer wantonly protest each and every call in a belligerent and graceless manner, impeding his/her ability to preside over the bout.

I’ve written the following expectations with the experience of both the referee and fencer in mind. I hope they will spark a discussion in how we can facilitate a fair and positive experience on the piste, both for fencer and referee.

The following expectations shouldn’t be selectively applied; rather, they should be followed inclusively. The bouts in which both referee and fencer adhere to these ideals often produce exceptional matches that embody fencing’s values. The matches that don’t, we remember just as well, but for all the wrong reasons. Whether it’s an Occhiuzzian level of hostility from fencer to referee or a Barbara Czarian level of incompetence as displayed in the Shin A. Lam debacle, not following these expectations ruins the experience of fencing for both athlete and referee.

What a fencer expects from the referee:

What a referee expects from the fencer:

 

Talk-Back: What do you expect from fencer/referee?

“A fencer expects the referee to give them points they didn’t earn.” – Albert Aboaf

A fencer expects a referee to call actions consistently.” – Debbie Johnson

“A fencer expects the referee to be knowledgeable and impartial.” – Charles Ball

“A referee expects an argument.” – Michael McTigue

“A fencer expects a referee to be both confident and competent.” – Robbie Compton

“A fencer expects a referee to know the current rules, to be able to follow the action, and to be consistent.” – Mary-Ann Leonard Feller

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