Post by actualparent on Oct 31, 2013 20:49:28 GMT -5
Group -
We have a new high and low water mark. Where, out of the spirit of fairness, I was going to nominate myself for a single (very loud) wisecrack, I am out of the game. There was a fight at a u19 game, with a spectator chiming in, and I was going to nominate that, but that fell out of this week's process due to the following, astonishing report, which is substantiated on the other forum, at least to the point where I think it happened as described:
Light can shine through any window, and it does here:
This RYSA U11 psycho dad felt empowered enough to abuse a child referee until the child decided personal safety was enough of an issue to leave the field in the middle of a game. After that great RYSA U11 success, the psycho dad pursued the child referee off the field to the parking lot, abusing the child until the child started crying. It is described as :
Re: Referee was literally crying after a u11 game between AFC and RYSA !!wtfNo score for this post October 27 2013, 8:09 PM
Hear RYSA parent went after 13/14 year old ref crew in parking lot and would not let it go. Ref had a bad game but parent went after them and kid ended up in tears. Hope that they go after this A hole and report him for ref abuse. Other refs and assignor had to intervene and deal with it.
As this thread evolves, we've asked for others on the thread to confirm antics. The other soccer forum provided various accounts of the same event, so the award goes to the truly pathetic RYSA piece of shizat dad that would chase a 13 year old ref into a parking lot to scare and intimidate the child into crying. WHAT A PIECE OF shizat.
This is exactly the kind of stuff I formed this thread for - it is intolerable. The ref's parents should press criminal assault charges against the parent, and a civil suit is called for. GSSA should actually get off the bidet and do something, for a change.
Until that happens, we will report on parent antics, and now we need to start reporting on what GSSA does about these incidents, and who is accountable.
We have a new high and low water mark. Where, out of the spirit of fairness, I was going to nominate myself for a single (very loud) wisecrack, I am out of the game. There was a fight at a u19 game, with a spectator chiming in, and I was going to nominate that, but that fell out of this week's process due to the following, astonishing report, which is substantiated on the other forum, at least to the point where I think it happened as described:
Light can shine through any window, and it does here:
This RYSA U11 psycho dad felt empowered enough to abuse a child referee until the child decided personal safety was enough of an issue to leave the field in the middle of a game. After that great RYSA U11 success, the psycho dad pursued the child referee off the field to the parking lot, abusing the child until the child started crying. It is described as :
Re: Referee was literally crying after a u11 game between AFC and RYSA !!wtfNo score for this post October 27 2013, 8:09 PM
Hear RYSA parent went after 13/14 year old ref crew in parking lot and would not let it go. Ref had a bad game but parent went after them and kid ended up in tears. Hope that they go after this A hole and report him for ref abuse. Other refs and assignor had to intervene and deal with it.
As this thread evolves, we've asked for others on the thread to confirm antics. The other soccer forum provided various accounts of the same event, so the award goes to the truly pathetic RYSA piece of shizat dad that would chase a 13 year old ref into a parking lot to scare and intimidate the child into crying. WHAT A PIECE OF shizat.
This is exactly the kind of stuff I formed this thread for - it is intolerable. The ref's parents should press criminal assault charges against the parent, and a civil suit is called for. GSSA should actually get off the bidet and do something, for a change.
Until that happens, we will report on parent antics, and now we need to start reporting on what GSSA does about these incidents, and who is accountable.