Back

OSAAtoday

Menu
The first all-female championship crew in 22 years sends a hopeful message for women to get involved in high school officiating

November 13, 2018 by Jerry Ulmer, OSAAtoday
The crew for the 4A girls final was (from left) Dana Gorman, Loraine Hill, Melanie Namkoong and Terrah Owens.
The crew for the 4A girls final was (from left) Dana Gorman, Loraine Hill, Melanie Namkoong and Terrah Owens.

History was made on the soccer field Saturday during the OSAA 4A girls final at Liberty High School.

But it had nothing to do with the teams or players.

For the first time in 22 years, an all-female officiating crew worked a championship match. The four-member crew was on hand for Hidden Valley’s 1-0 win over Valley Catholic.

Melanie Namkoong of the Lane County Soccer Referees Association served as the referee. Dana Gorman (Lane County) and Terrah Owens (Mid-Valley) were assistant referees, and Loraine Hill (Coos Brookings) was the fourth official.

It was the first championship match for each one. All of them began officiating in Oregon in the last 10 years.

The last time an all-female crew worked a final was in 1996, when four Lane County officials – Pat Wasp (referee), Alicia Kehoe (assistant), Karyl Allen (assistant) and Melanie King (fourth official) – presided over the 3A/2A/1A girls championship match between Henley and Catlin Gabel.

OSAAtoday caught up with Namkoong before Saturday’s soccer match to discuss the significance of the all-female crew:


The 4A football final Nov. 24 will represent another breakthrough for women’s officials. Rebecca Brisson of the Portland Football Officials Association – one of five women out of 663 high school football officials in Oregon – is the first woman selected to work a championship game.