TY - JOUR PY - 2008// TI - Game management, context effects, and calibration: the case of yellow cards in soccer JO - Journal of sport and exercise psychology A1 - Unkelbach, Christian A1 - Memmert, Daniel SP - 95 EP - 109 VL - 30 IS - 1 N2 - Referees in German first-league soccer games do not award as many yellow cards in the beginning of a game as should be statistically expected. One explanation for this effect is the concept of game management (Mascarenhas, Collins, & Mortimer, 2002). Alternatively, the consistency model (Haubensak, 1992) explains the effect as a necessity of the judgment situation: Referees need to calibrate a judgment scale, and, to preserve degrees of freedom in that scale, they need to avoid extreme category judgments in the beginning (i.e., yellow cards). Experiment 1 shows that referees who judge scenes in the context of a game award fewer yellow cards than referees who see the same scenes in random order. Experiment 2 shows the combined influence of game management (by explicitly providing information about the game situation) and calibration (early vs. late scenes in the time course of a game). Theoretical implications for expert refereeing and referee training are discussed.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 0895-2779 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -