Imperial Valley Press

Pham honored to be first Asian American official

- BY ROB MAADDI

Lo van Pham’s journey to the NFL began when he fell in love with sports upon arriving in Texas after living in refugee camps with his family.

More than 40 years later, van Pham is set to become the first Asian American to officiate in the NFL.

“I never dreamed about being the first of anything,” van Pham said on the AP Pro Football Podcast. “It’s just a great honor. People reaching out to me, reminding me of how special this is, and I just want to do the right thing and carry whatever message I need to carry to represent not only our Asian culture and Asian friends, but also really to represent all minorities, whether Middle Eastern, just different background­s, different people that are out there. I want to communicat­e to convey the fact that if you work hard, prepare yourself, commit and do the things that you can control, your desires and your passion will carry you to the next level in whatever endeavor you choose.”

Before he was introduced to football in America, van Pham and his parents and two brothers survived traveling the jungles of South Vietnam and bounced around refugee camps in Laos, Thailand and the Philippine­s for about three years. He was too young to remember much of that experience, but his parents filled him in as he got older.

Van Pham, 49, grew up surrounded by Dallas Cowboys fans in Amarillo, Texas. He started playing football as a kid and continued through high school. He turned to officiatin­g to stay connected to the sport while pursuing a graduate degree at the University of Colorado.

“When I signed up for it, it was kind of out of boredom and out of love for the game,” he said. “I remember telling my friends what I was doing, their first comment: ‘Are you nuts? Are you crazy? You got better things to do on a Saturday and Sunday.’

“I actually love this. This is what I grew up playing, and I just absolutely love the game. And from there, it just made me want to get better.”

Van Pham attended officiatin­g clinics and camps after moving back to Texas from Colorado. He trained with a high school associatio­n and developed his skills as an official.

Van Pham joins the NFL from the Big 12 Conference. He’ll work as a side judge while maintainin­g his day job because officials aren’t full-time employees. Van Pham’s background is civil structure engineerin­g.

“Since being in Power Five football, most of my friends seem to think that football is really my fulltime job, and my real job is my part-time job,” he said.

The NFL has 121 onfield game officials, 49 of them are women or minorities.

 ?? PHOTO VIA AP ?? In this Dec. 29, 2018 photo provided by Lo van Pham (from left) line judge Derek Anderson, referee Mike Defee and side judge Lo van Pham pose for a photo before the Peach Bowl NCAA college football game in Atlanta.
PHOTO VIA AP In this Dec. 29, 2018 photo provided by Lo van Pham (from left) line judge Derek Anderson, referee Mike Defee and side judge Lo van Pham pose for a photo before the Peach Bowl NCAA college football game in Atlanta.

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