The Best Pre-Match Warm Up For Football and Soccer Referees

 
Pre Match Warm Up for Referees
 

As a Referee, I have always done a warm-up.

Now that statement might sound a bit obvious - especially now that I am a Semi-Professional Referee and warming up really is a minimum requirement.

But even when I used to be on my own, on the Brentwood Sunday League at 10:30 am on a wet, rainy and very cold Sunday morning in the depths of Essex, England I would head out and warm up. I would do a few laps of the field. A few shuttle runs. Some jumps and some dynamic stretching.

All on my own.

Players just stood around and kicked the ball at the goal as their warm-up…and there I was…taking it seriously and showing that I wanted to do a great job. We all started somewhere as referees, and what we do at that starting point lays the foundation for what you may or may not do in your overall career.

I firmly believe the warm-up serves a much bigger purpose than just getting you physically ready for your game, and hopefully, if you start implementing it into every game you do, not only will you feel better physically, but your match control, your decision making and player management will all improve immensely too.

And that’s never going to be a bad thing on the pitch, is it?

This is also a topic that we cover quite regularly on my Podcast: Red or Yellow.

Listeners are always getting in touch with questions about fitness, warm-ups, and how best to manage themselves physically on and off the pitch.

Red Or Yellow is the fastest growing and biggest refereeing podcast there is, so if you want to be a part of our amazing community please feel free to listen to it at your leisure.

 
Pre Match Warm Up For A Referee
 

Table of Contents For The Best Pre-Match Warm-Up For Football and Soccer Referees:

  1. Benefits of a Pre-Match Warm-Up

  2. Problem-Solving Your Pre-Match Warm Up

  3. The Best Pre-Match Warm Up For Football Referees

  4. Pre-Match Warm Up Best Practice


Benefits of a Pre-Match Warm-Up

 

As I mentioned previously, the warm-up is a very key component of your overall match-day experience. It goes far further than just getting yourself ready physically.

I personally see the warm-up as such a useful space for a referee, and I think it wholly benefits your game.

A Warm Up Creates an Awesome First Impression:

What is a first impression?

It takes about 7 seconds for a first impression to be made, a harsh truth, but one nonetheless, and to then change that first impression you need to meet the same person at least 7 more times thereafter.

Where do you think the saying “you’re growing on me” comes from?

In football, you are likely to meet everyone more than seven times in a manner of speaking

  1. When you first arrive to the ground

  2. When you go to the boardroom

  3. When you do your pitch walk

  4. When you head to the field of play to warm up

  5. The walkout

  6. Kick Off

  7. During the game

Now if you miss number four, then you are going to have to work a lot harder elsewhere - and during a warm-up, because the field is large and you are moving around a lot, you could meet people more than once.

A first impression is made up of:

  • Your body language

  • Your appearance

  • Your demeanour

  • Your mannerisms

  • How you are dressed

You want to impress the players, managers, coaches, match day coaches and even the spectators before you have even blown your whistle. By making a good first impression you might just get the grace you need on a tight decision because a player may be more willing to work with you as opposed to against you.

How to create a better first impression other than warming up…

  • Dress professionally. These days if I was still in the UK I would have to wear a suit to a game. Here in Queensland, I have to wear a black polo shirt, black trousers and dress shoes, and crucially dark-coloured socks (nothing is worse than when you are doing a pitch walk and a flash of white socks is between black trousers and black shoes). However, when I was coming through the ranks in Essex, I would still dress in a refereeing tracksuit. I would have plain black jogging bottoms, clean trainers and a black Nike T-shirt with the FA logo on it. I would never go to a game in my kit (this would be acceptable for child safety reasons if you are Under 18 or a female official where there isn’t a dedicated Female changing room).

  • Don’t be late to the game.

  • Make eye contact with players, coaches, and spectators and smile at them as well. Look relaxed and like you want to be there.

  • Introduce yourself appropriately to the correct people.

  • Don’t walk onto the field of play halfway through a conversation on your phone. Just finish your phone call in your car before you walk into your venue.

  • Don’t sit on your phone pitch side. There is nothing worse than seeing a referee sit on the touchline when the teams are warming up, and you’re doom-scrolling when you could be warming up too.

  • Don’t have a dirty kit. Make sure your clothes are clean and professional.

  • Get ahead of problems like whether or not the balls are flat, the goals aren’t attached to the goal posts properly and getting the team sheets in on time.

  • Have all the tools you need in your kit bag to do your job properly. There is nothing worse than not having your AR flags with you and having to get your Club ARs run the line with a subs bib in their hand - trust me, you only make this mistake once (I speak from experience).

  • Chat with the players and the coaches. Ask them how their season has been going, how they played last week, and hunt for other information that might help you in the game about the way the teams play, or any players you need to look out for that may be trouble. Keep it lighthearted, warm and welcoming. It is really important to not pre-judge any players, as they can tell when you do that.

A Warm-Up Saves You Time:

There is nothing worse than being completely rushed for kick-off. We’ve all been there, stood in the centre circle still waiting for a confirmed time sheet and the away team seems to want to take 15 minutes to find someone to run your line for you. Or they are trying to delay because their “star striker” is on his way due to being hungover from a stag do the night before.

Before you know it, you should have kicked off 10 minutes ago and are now looking at a 30-second halftime just to keep on schedule, because there are another 2 games on after yours.

Well, this is where doing a warm-up can save you time and help keep you on schedule.

You see when I am running around the field going through my drills (more on these later) then that is a unique opportunity to make sure the teams are on top of these issues before you have even thought about guzzling your pre-match Lucozade (other isotonic drinks are available).

By going over to the teams, as you are warming up helping to cement that first impression, and getting ahead of problems that you are aware of but the teams might not be until you want to start the game, then it will keep you on the schedule you need to be on.

A Warm-Up Allows You To Show Off:

Soccer is a game of physical prowess. One thing I notice when warming up is that players are watching. They want to get a read on you as much as you do them, and therefore if they see you warming up professionally then they may just be impressed.

As I am getting older, I enjoy the challenge in my warm-up of showing that I can keep up with my much younger assistants when we are doing our laps and final sprints. Nothing makes me feel happier before a game than if I have out-sprinted a 22-year-old AR - and if it is making me happy, chances are it is making the players take notice that you are up to the task.

If you’re fit, take pride in it, and enjoy the fact that you can outrun players. Coaches, spectators and Match Day Referee Coaches are always watching.

A Warm-Up Helps Build Teamwork:

Refereeing is a funny task sometimes, especially when you have Assistants who you have never met. You have to present yourself as if you are a team that has spent a whole season together perfecting your game - just like the players you are refereeing - when in reality you have likely never met your ARs before, and aren’t likely to work with them again any time soon.

This is if you are lucky enough to have Assistant Referees.

Gelling quickly, getting on the same page and gaining trust for each other isn’t an easy task and the warm-up is a crucial tool in being able to do this. Obviously, you have your pre-match brief as well, but life is very different when you are all under physical and mental pressure to get decisions right.

My favourite warm-up drill to do with Assistants is the following:

Get your team and take them to a marked-out corner on the field. This. can be at the halfway line, on the edge of the penalty area or actually at the corner markings. The referee starts in the middle, and the two assistants line up on a line facing the referee. Now, wherever the referee runs to, both Assistants must stay in line with the referee on their axis. Therefore if the referee runs into the corner, then both ARs will have to move at the same speed towards the corner. If the referee decides to run up one line, then one AR will remain level on their axis, whilst the other AR has to side-step or sprint to keep up with the referee.

Once you get the hang of it, you can vary the speeds, intensities, and directions of each run toward and away from your respective Assistants. Give each person about 90 seconds to 2 minutes pretending to be the referee.

It is a fun game and builds rapport between the team nice and quick.

A Warm-Up Helps The Participants Trust You:

As I have already mentioned, eyes are on you from the second you enter the field/ground. Getting participants to trust you is a very useful tool and the warm-up can help you with this. It shows everyone that you are there to take the game as seriously as the players are taking it, and that you care that you do a professional job. If you can get the players to buy into this as well, it will make your whole game a lot easier to manage.

In sales people often talk about how long it can take someone to buy something from you. There is a process for this called, know, trust and like.

Once you have mastered all three of them, then a potential client transitions to an actual client.

As a referee, you must work on this as well, because I promise you that you will need to sell a decision at some point in your game, and if the participants already know, trust and like you then it might just make that moment a little easier to navigate.

Problem-Solving Your Pre-Match Warm-Up

I am assuming here that you have already messaged them before the game to arrange what time they need to be at the ground to make sure you can get everything prepped for the game. If you haven’t done that, then your ARs aren’t running late. If they didn’t know what time you needed them, then they are well within their rights to do what they please. However, if they are running, I would suggest just preparing as normal, and allowing them to slot into your pre-match preparations when they arrive. This may mean having to hold off your pre-match briefing so as not to repeat yourself.



I’m Carrying an Injury and don’t want to make it worse before the game

This is something I struggle with these days. Due to my injuries, I very much have to save myself physically for my game. This has meant that I have had to completely change the way I warm up, to still get the benefits of the warm-up, but also to not impact my on-field performance.

I therefore now just work around the injury, not through it. You should never work through an injury. My injury is in my feet, so I have to prepare my body with as little impact on the feet as possible. This involves a lot more mobility work, much slower-paced running and more walking compared to shuttles and sprints. The physical warm-up you do is to make sure you are ready for your game in the best way possible given your current context.



There is No Space to Warm Up

Luckily where I referee, we often have the whole field to warm up on, or a designated warm-up area, but sometimes there may be back-to-back games and you can’t get onto the field to do sprints and laps. This is where knowing your body and what your physical outcomes for the warm-up can come in real handy, and then you can adapt to the space you do have. A referee needs to be able to change direction, sprint, work at a high intensity and have a good cardio baseline. The higher likelihood of injury in a game will come from the sprinting and the changes of direction required. Therefore you need to prepare your body for these eventualities.

You will be able to find a space, where you can still prepare. This could be your dressing room for example. If that was the case, I would focus on your mobility for the lower back, mid-back and hips in the form of dynamic stretching. I would then put in some hopping, vertical jumping, lateral jumping and lunges with some pause squats. This way you would engage all the mobility you need, as well as prepare your body to activate the fast twitch muscles you will need when sprinting.


Finally; The Best Pre-Match Warm Up For Football Referees

Thank you so much for reading my Blog. If you want to find out anything more about fitness for referees then I do have other articles throughout this Blog.

A Practical Fitness Plan for Soccer and Football Referees

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