The Mercury News

Officiatin­g boss lacks Power Five experience

- JON BiLNER

In the two years since an instant replay-review controvers­y engulfed the Pac-12, plenty has changed within the officiatin­g program.

At the behest of the athletic directors, the conference office hired an outside firm to conduct a sixmonth review.

On-field and replay officials have left the conference, while others have joined the program.

Woodie Dixon, the former administra­tor who infamously influenced the replay process in the USC-Washington State game in 2018, is no longer in the conference.

There is more transparen­cy to the process, and a new instant replay manual has been created.

But at least two things have not changed:

The egregious mistakes that dominate social media and detract from the product; and the

man in charge of day-today operations of the officiatin­g program:

David Coleman, a wellliked former Army officer whose experience as a Football Bowl Subdivisio­n official is limited.

Coleman reports to Merton Hanks, who was hired in August to oversee all aspects of Pac-12 football. But the primary responsibi­lity for recruiting, training, teaching, managing and evaluating Pac-12 officials falls to Coleman.

Hanks expressed “complete confidence” in Coleman in a statement to the Hotline.

But after the latest controvers­y — the messy goalline sequence in the Oregon- Oregon State game — some analysts and former players are wondering if the problems are part of a larger issue.

“Generally the performanc­e on the field is not good enough,’’ said Evan Moore, the Fox analyst and former Stanford and NFL player, “and it starts at the top with leadership and recruitmen­t.”

A Hotline investigat­ion into Coleman’s background determined that his on-field experience falls far short of the industry standard applied by the other conference­s that make up the Power Five.

Hired five-and-a-half years ago, Coleman entered the Pac-12 during a tumultuous time for the officiatin­g program.

He replaced Tony Corrente, who resigned abruptly during the 2014 season for “personal and profession­al” reasons.

According to multiple sources, Corrente had difference­s with Dixon, the football supervisor who had no background as a player, coach or official but served a dual role as the Pac-12’s general counsel.

The conference appointed an interim to oversee the officiatin­g program for the remainder of the 2014 season, then hired Coleman in the spring of 2015.

In the press release announcing the hire, the Pac12 stated of Coleman:

“As an official, he served as an Instant Replay Official for the NFL, including working Super Bowl XL, and served as a line judge in the Mid American Conference and as a Referee in the Mid Eastern Athletic Conference earlier in his career.”

The Hotline sought more detail and, over the course of a months-long investigat­ion, unearthed the following:

Coleman worked in the replay booth for Super Bowl XL, but he was not the Instant Replay Official.

Instead, he was the Replay Assistant, according to a database maintained by the NFL Referees Associatio­n.

Those are different roles, explained Michael Signora, NFL Senior Vice President of Football & Internatio­nal Communicat­ions:

“The replay official is the head of the replay crew and has authority to stop the game to initiate a review and provide administra­tive assistance to onfield officials.

“The replay assistant is focused on assisting the replay official with informatio­n that the replay official needs during the game.”

The Hotline asked the conference office for clarity on Coleman’s role in the NFL instant replay process and determined that Coleman was never the lead Replay Official.

Per a conference spokespers­on:

“David was an Instant Replay Official ( Video Operator/Replay Assistant) for 11 seasons, including serving in that capacity on the crew for Super Bowl XL in 2006. His ring says National Football League Official on the top and Coleman Instant Replay on the side.”

As the Pac-12 release indicated in the spring of 2015, Coleman did, in fact, serve as a line judge in the Mid American Conference.

The extent of that experience, however, is limited.

The Hotline reached out to the MAC office about Coleman and asked for “the specifics of his experience with the conference (duration, role, etc).”

We received the following response from the MAC:

“After hearing back from our membership, David Coleman worked the following games during the 1996 season as a line judge for the MAC:

• Akron vs. Central Michigan on Oct. 12, 1996

• Ball State vs. Eastern Michigan on Nov. 2, 1996

• and a game our officials evidential­ly worked as well — Ashland vs. Youngstown State on Oct. 19, 1996.”

So according to the MAC, the extent of Coleman’s experience was two games. (Ashland and Youngstown State are not major college teams.)

Which would make the entirety of his FBS experience … two games.

We checked with the Pac-12 to determine whether there were any additional examples of his on-field work within major college football.

The conference responded: “David was a Line Judge during the 1996 season. This has been verified by the Mid American Conference.”

A comparison of resumes suggests that Coleman’s background as an FBS official does not stand up to the experience level of his peers.

The following info was gathered from biographie­s published by the conference­s. ( Note: The referee is the lead on-field official.) ACC >> Head of officiatin­g: Dennis Hennigan. FBS onfield experience: 17 years as a referee; worked three Rose Bowls and a BCS championsh­ip game.

BIG 12 >> Head of officiatin­g: Greg Burks. FBS on-field experience: 18 years in the Big 12; worked 17 bowl games and served as the referee for the first CFP title game.

BIG TEN >> Head of officiatin­g: Bill Carollo. FBS onfield experience: Eight years in the Big Ten, plus 20 in the NFL; worked two Super Bowls.

SEC >> Head of officiatin­g: John McDaid. FBS on-field experience: Five years as a referee in the SEC, six in the American; worked four New Year’s Six bowl games.

PAC-12 >> Head of officiatin­g: David Coleman. FBS on-field experience: Two games as a linesman in the Mid-American Conference.

Coleman wasn’t available to comment for this article.

But Hanks, the chief of football operations, issued a statement to the Hotline following a question about Coleman’s qualificat­ions:

“In our shared time together at the NFL and in the Pac-12 conference, working with David has given me tremendous insight and admiration to his ability to lead Pac-12 officiatin­g.

“I have complete confidence in David and our shared goals for the bright future of Pac-12 officiatin­g have not changed.”

Following the instant replay controvers­y in 2018, the Pac-12 hired Sibson Consulting to conduct an independen­t review of all aspects of the officiatin­g process.

The report determined the officiatin­g program was “fundamenta­lly sound.” But there were areas that didn’t measure up, including recruitmen­t and training:

“The Pac-12 is the only Power Five Conference without an affiliated Group of Five recruiting and training partner for officiatin­g, often called a ‘pipeline,’ which is a major weakness.”

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CoLLEGE HotLInE

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