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![]() Mike Chioda in 2012 | |
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Activity sectors | Professional wrestling matches |
Inprofessional wrestling, areferee is an authority figure present in or near the ring during matches. The referee's purpose is similar to that of referees in combat sports such as boxing or mixed martial arts, that is, as an arbiter of the rules and the person charged with rendering decisions. In reality, the referee is, like the wrestlers, a participant in executing a match in accordance with its script including its predetermined outcome, and is responsible for controlling the flow of the match and for relaying information or instructions from backstage officials to the wrestlers. Like wrestlers, referees are also responsible for maintainingkayfabe, and must render decisions in accordance with the promotion's kayfabe rules.[1]
The kayfabe purpose of a professional wrestling referee is to render decisions (pinfalls,submissions,disqualifications,countouts) during a match but thelegit purpose they serve is to transmit messages to wrestlers about the progress of matches, communicate with them about the amount of time left (plus the beginning and end of commercial breaks on live broadcasts) and, if necessary, help them gauge the crowd reaction as well as reminding them of match script.[2] They also have a key role in ensuring that the wrestlers are physically capable to continue, and to stop the match/inform the opponent if there is a risk of injury present. According to refereeJim Korderas, the purpose of a referee is to help the talent to tell the story, while being invisible.[3]
Presently, referees wear wireless earpieces, to allow backstage officials to communicate with them during matches. Referees are also selected by their employers subject to their height and weight, and normally referees would be no more than six feet (183 cm) tall, weigh no more than 180 lb (81.5 kg) and may generally display a non-athletic physique; examples of this areWWE refereesMike Chioda andCharles Robinson. Wrestlers who either began as referees, or retired from the ring and continued as referees, often were under six feet. The purpose of this size discrepancy is purely to emphasize the height, weight and musculature of some of the larger wrestlers and to compensate for smaller stars.[4]
In recent years, to prevent the spread of blood-borne diseases such ashepatitis, WWE referees began keeping a pair of latexmedical gloves in their pockets. This policy remains today. The gloves are put on whenever a wrestler is bleeding.[citation needed]
Although professional wrestling isworked, real injuries can be sustained. In such an event, the referee raises their hands above their head into an "X" shape to alert backstage officials andparamedics, as well as any other wrestlers that what is going on is really happening. An "X" sign across the chest is a warning, it signifies that a wrestler may be injured, but is still able to compete. In recent times,Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) and WWE have used the "X" sign to signifystoryline as well as legitimate injuries. An example of this is whenA.J. Styles was kayfabe injured after being hit with apowerbomb off the stage through a table byBully Ray. Another example is during the 2006Money in the Bank ladder match atWrestleMania 22 whenMatt Hardy performed asuplex onRic Flair from the top of the ladder, and the two referees,Jim Korderas and Mike Chioda, used the "X" sign. Flair re-entered the match minutes afterwards, showing that he was not legitimately injured.
An unusual usage of the sign came at TNAVictory Road (2011) whenJeff Hardy was heavily intoxicated but had managed to evade management prior to his entrance. RefereeBrian Hebner realised that Hardy was not in condition to wrestle and threw up the sign prior to the match starting, causing an on-screen intervention fromEric Bischoff that leadSting to immediately and legitimately pin Hardy in ashoot.
After the X sign is given, the officials backstage would communicate to the referee, if necessary, revised plans to end the match quickly.[5] There is also a "blow off" sign, raising both arms straight up, if a wrestler seemed injured but feels he can continue.
FollowingAEW's All Out where a match was stopped in the middle for medical checkup, referees now have two-way radio communication so they can observe incidents during matches that may require medical attention by communicating with medical officials if necessary on the spot. Instead of the "X" sign, referees are now able to stop matches on the spot with radio communication.[6] RefereePaul Turner used the radio to call medical officials immediately on an October 18, 2022 episode ofDynamite after "Hangman" Adam Page was legitimately injured. The match was stopped immediately and Jon Moxley was declared winner via referee stoppage.
Mostprofessional wrestling promotions have a kayfabe rule that referees do not make decisions based on anything they do not personally witness. Because of this, distracting or incapacitating the referee is often an element of a match, especially in standard matches where a wrestler is liable to lose a match by disqualification for performing an illegal move. Distraction or incapacitation of the referee is usually a precursor to thevillain wrestler either performing a normally illegal move without any consequence, or outside interference in the match (arun in). Less commonly, theheroic wrestler might appear to win the match by pinfall or submission if not for the referee being distracted or incapacitated. These pre-planned temporary injuries to the referee are known as "bumps".[7]
Distracting the referee is usually a deliberate tactic done by the villain, hismanager, or someone else in his corner. It can also take the form of the referee taking an inordinate amount of time to talk to the heroic wrestler for violating the rules. Incapacitating the referee is usually done by a purportedly accidental collision with a wrestler, or a wrestler missing an attack on an opponent and hitting the referee instead, though sometimes a referee may be incapacitated by a deliberate attack by the villain or his manager.
When any of these happen, the referee usually appears to be knocked unconscious for a period of time by a move that is not considered particularly devastating when applied to a wrestler. This has garnered criticism over the years, as many referee bumps are supposed to depict the wrestlers are exceptionally powerful, but in many situations, referee bumps simply make the referees appear unrealistically weak and fragile. Perhaps the most infamous example of this happened at the otherwise universally-acclaimed pay-per-view eventWrestlemania X-Seven, during a match betweenTriple H andThe Undertaker, when the Undertaker knocked out refereeMike Chioda with a single stomp and a single elbow to the back. Despite the relative lack of brutality, Chioda was kayfabe unconscious for ten solid minutes.[8]
A special guest referee is a stipulation for any match in which the usual referee is replaced with a "guest" filling in as the official. Celebrities (such asMuhammad Ali in the main event ofWrestleMania I), managers and other wrestlers can "guest" as the special referee. In some cases, a special referee is put into a match which is already a different match type or stipulation (for example:Hell in a Cell with a special referee, usuallyShawn Michaels). The special referee would often be biased towards or against one of the competitors or could be assigned as the special referee to ensure the match is called down the line. In the WWF in September 1999, after all the referees got sick of continuously being attacked by wrestlers, they kayfabe went on strike, leading to other WWF workers (most notablyHarvey Whippleman andTom Prichard, along with a non-striking Jim Korderas) becoming "scab" referees until the night afterUnforgiven, whereVince McMahon gave the regular referees more authority in matches (along with finingTriple H for striking on that same night).
Though rare, it is not unheard of for normal referees to engage in storylines where they become biased against or in favor of particular wrestlers in a manner usually reserved for special referees, Danny Davis being an example. Also, one of the more famous examples of this is the case ofEarl Hebner in 2000, who became biased against then-dominant heel Triple H out of spite towards Triple H constantly abusing him during their matches. This culminated on the April 26, 2000, edition ofRaw is War, where Hebner counted as fast as he could whileChris Jericho was pinning Triple H with theWWF Championship on the line. A more recent example isScott Armstrong, a referee who was in cahoots withThe Authority during the years of 2013 through 2016, often making fast counts when it was advantageous to members of the Authority and often coming out during ref bumps during matches where Authority members were competing.
Also known as special enforcer or special guest enforcer is same as the special referee, but the guest referee stays on the outside of the ring enforcing what the normal referee does not see. These guests are sometimes known as "enforcers", the most famous of which wasMike Tyson, who served as the special guest enforcer for theWWF Championship match betweenStone Cold Steve Austin andShawn Michaels atWrestleMania XIV, andChuck Norris who served as special guest enforcer at the1994 Survivor Series in a match betweenThe Undertaker andYokozuna.
Special enforcers can become regular referees if the original inside referee becomes (kayfabe) permanently incapacitated. Otherwise though, the enforcer generally has no decision-making power, and is really put in the match to physically force wrestlers to obey the rules or physically remove interfering wrestlers from ringside.
An effectivegimmick for the villain wrestlers is to have a personal referee, who is on the permanent payroll of the villain. The referee can be simply a lackey, or a loyal ally with a senior position. This is a broader extension of the "corrupt referee" gimmick, in that the referee's allegiance is openly made public, and is blatantly flaunted to incense the audience – the referee himself is exempt from punishment due to his official position.
Examples include when theNew World Order recruitedWCW's senior refereeNick Patrick, and he became the sole official of nWo matches. He officiated every single match of thenWo Souled Out event in 1997. Ric Flair andThe Four Horsemen had their own personal referee in WCW, Charles Robinson, who eventually adopted the look and mannerisms of Flair, and earned the nickname "Little Naitch", from Flair's nickname "Nature Boy". For a time in WCW, referees would not workScott Steiner's matches, so he employedMark "Slick" Johnson as his personal referee. Johnson had black and white paint on top of his head, wore an nWo logo on his shirt and had a whistle around his neck, just likeECW'sBill Alfonso. Another example of this is whenKurt Angle hadDaivari as his personal referee during late 2005, with Daivari starting as the referee of Angle's match againstJohn Cena for the WWE Championship at the2005 Survivor Series. AfterEric Bischoff was fired weeks after this, Daivari was relegated to being Angle's manager.
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A comparison of bothRaw andSmackDownbrand referee attires from past years, though there is no longer much difference between the attire of Raw and SmackDown referees |
WWE referees have had a series of different uniforms throughout the years. From the 1970s until 1983, still operating under the World Wide Wrestling Federation banner, referees wore black and white striped shirts, comparable to referees in other sports, such asice hockey,basketball, andAmerican football. In the mid-1980s until 1995, a World Wrestling Federation (WWF) referee's attire consisted of a blue collared shirt with black trousers, boots, andbow tie, similar to that of a boxing official. Beginning with the March 13, 1995 episode ofMonday Night Raw, the uniform was changed back to the black and white striped shirt with a WWF logo patch on the left breast as well as the shoulders. With theWWE brand extension in 2002, referees appearing onSmackDown! began wearing bluepolo shirts with black pinstripes, differentiating themselves from the Raw referees, who continued to wear black and white shirts. WhenECW was revived in 2006, their referees were given black shirts. As of 2007, they had grey and black polo shirts. As of November 2008, however, all referees wore black and white striped shirts and were no longer brand exclusive. On the November 15, 2010 episode ofRaw, the referees wore the "boxing referee" attire as part of theOld School Raw special episode. Since the re-establishment of the brand extension in 2016, WWE referees have given colored designations on the patches with the logo; for instance, blue forSmackDown and red forRaw. However,NXT, WWE's developmental brand, has the NXT logo patches (formerly yellow until 2021) in place of the WWE logo patches. AfterRawmoved to Netflix in January 2025, all WWE referees in three assigned brands consolidated their look wearing a gray polo shirt with two black stripes on the left side similar to itsUFC counterparts as both promotions are owned byTKO Group Holdings.[9]
In WCW, referees wore collared shirts with bow ties until around 1999, when they switched to striped shirts. DuringThe Invasion storyline in WWE (known at the time as WWF), the WCW referees wore white polo shirts, switching near the end of the storyline to baseball-jersey style grey shirts with a small black WCW logo on the left breast and one on the right sleeve. In ECW, referees first wore striped shirts (as they split off from theNWA), and later wore an all-black uniform akin to those ofmixed martial arts officials, later with a half-black, half-red shirt. The all black uniform would return for the first twoWWE One Night Stand events, before giving way to the brand extension ECW referee shirts.
InImpact Wrestling, referees have switched between the striped shirts and the "boxing referee" attire on occasion.
InAll Elite Wrestling, referees wear black and white striped shirts with the AEW logo, except for pay-per-view events, where the referee's shirt contains a patch with the event logo, on the right breast. AEW refereeAubrey Edwards noted on social media the promotion has a deal withCanton, Ohio manufacturer Smitty Officials Apparel, which supplies a gridiron football-specific two-inch wide stripe shirt for officials.[10]
Special referees wear themed versions of these; for example, if a regular female wrestler or celebrity is cast, she would typically wear a skimpier version of a normal referee's shirt. This practice was phased out the WWE throughout the 2010s, as a reflection on the general trend of treating female wrestlers less as models and more like genuine athletes; WWE, AEW, and Impact all now regularly feature female referees on their programming wearing the same uniform as their male counterparts. Others may just add a referee-style shirt to their normal costume such as the case ofMick Foley, who wore a rumpled white dress shirt with black stripes painted on while arbitrating matches. In these cases, the emphasis is on the character temporarily assuming the referee's role.