An official (referee or linesman) is on the ice with the players, they wear a striped jersey to distinguish them from the players. Referees are mainly responsible for signaling goals, stopping play when the goalie covers the puck, when the puck goes out of play. They are also responsible for calling penalties. A linesman on the other hand, watches for Offside and Icing violations and stop play for them. They also conduct all faceoffs (except for at the start of a period and after a goal) Linesmen can also give the referee insight on a play and help to make the final call. A referee pretty much just monitors the game to make sure its as far as possible.
There are a variety of different referee systems, used in various leagues. The most popular is the 1 referee, 2 linesmen system. One referee covers the full area of the ice, while the two linesmen make offside and icing calls. In the NHL, and other pro leagues, they use 2 referees and 2 linesmen. This as helped for the crackdown on obstruction and to have stricter penalty calls. They also use the "two man system" Where both officials act as referees and linesmen.
Theres the 1-1 system. 1 referee, and 1 linesmen. The linesman covers both lines. This, and the two man system are usually used when 1 official doesn't show up.
The 2-1 system. Two referees and 1 linesmen is a newer system just being made popular in the last few years. Not many leagues use this yet.
In non competitive leagues, they use the 1 man system. This doesn't allow for as precise calls.
(some of this is from the "officials" article, on Wikipedia)
In a netball game a referee counts the scores and keep an eyes on the play just in case a mistake appears and tells the teams who's starts centre when a team scored.
Yes instead of a referee as in football it is called an umpire and a timekeeper plus scorer.
you stand by your opponent and the referee throws the ball in the air and who ever gets it can run to their net
you play netball on a netball court :)
well, you can keep a wristband or hair-tie on your wrist and swap it from one hand to another representing whose centre pass it is.
You can go onto netball websites like netball Australia and district netball, too.
two netball posts netball pitch one netball two umpires
Netball was invented in 1892 but was called Women's Basketball not Netball.
no geoetry in netball
a netball court
The possessive form of "referee" is "referee's." This indicates ownership or relationship to the referee. For example, "The referee's decision was final."
A referee that referee's a reserve game