Site icon Compliance Culture

Integrity of game play: Referee bias

This is the third in a series of five posts on the topic of integrity of game play.  The first post discussed the impact of various types of player misconduct on sportsmanship and game outcomes.  Last week’s post debated whether tanking can be ethical and looked at numerous examples of tanking across different sports to compare how it happens and what its effect is. Today’s post is about referee bias and how it affects games, players, and teams.  The fourth post, on March 14, will be about organizational cheating operations by teams.  The fifth post and the last in the series, on March 21, will be about unethical leadership of coaches.

Teams and their fans often accuse referees of being biased or making unfair calls. Whenever players or spectators disagree with the call made or penalty assessed – which, for those on the wrong side of the outcome of the decision, is not all that rare – bias is often suspected or assumed.

Baseline bias in all human judgments can be a very powerful force. It’s often difficult to identify or resist before it has permeated choices made and values of right or wrong assigned.  Habits, routines, and biases can all have tremendous impact on decision-making, sometimes negative but always with the effect of artificially narrowing the framework and obscuring interests and/or consequences from the view of the person choosing.

For more on the role of bias in thinking and decision-making, and how this applies to ethics and the pursuit of integrity, check out this post on behavioral economics and compliance.  For much more on ethical decision-making, and factors like bias that complicate or hinder it, check out this postthis post, or this post.

Accusations and insinuations of bias by referees, in particular, can pose an extra threat to decision-making and thought processes in game play and penalty calls. As these judgments by referees can have a decisive impact on players’ success or competitive outcome and on the game itself, choices they make that are clouded by bias directly challenge game integrity. Prejudicial decisions and actions by referees, linesmen, and other game judges and officials can have a chilling effect on game play.

Some situations where referee bias has been claimed or suspected, and the motivations for or results of and reactions to it, in various sports include:

Check back next week, Wednesday March 14, for the fourth post in this series of five, which will discuss systemic efforts to cheat and gain unfair advantage conducted by team operations, in some cases having a dramatic impact on both reputation and outcome or future competitive possibilities.

Exit mobile version