Violet Palmer

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Violet Palmer (born 1964), is an NBA and WNBA basketball referee, who toppled gender barriers to become the first female official in U.S. professional sports. She also earned recognition as a member of two NCAA Division II women's championship basketball teams. She was the first woman to officiate an NBA playoff game when she did so on Apr. 25, 2006 between the Indiana Pacers and New Jersey Nets.

[edit] Biography

A native of Compton, California, Palmer grew up in the same neighborhood where Serena and Venus Williams lived as small children. She attended college at Cal Poly Pomona, where she played the role of point guard on the 1985 and 1986 NCAA Division II women's championship teams.

After years of refereeing at various levels, including NBA pre-season and exhibition games, Palmer was offered an opportunity to officiate the NCAA Division I men's tournament in 1996. She accepted, but the offer was later retracted when NCAA members balked at the idea of having a female referee male players.

In 1997, however, Palmer and Dee Kantner were signed by the NBA to together become the first female referees in any major U.S. professional sport. On October 31, 1997, Palmer made history when she and Kantner officiated the NBA season opener between the Vancouver Grizzlies and the Dallas Mavericks, in British Columbia, Canada.

An African American, Palmer's achievement was received with mixed feelings: While magazines such as Ebony and Sports Illustrated generally celebrated her achievement, some NBA players were critical. Basketballer Dennis Scott, who played for the Phoenix Suns at the time, expressed concern at having females referee male players. Scott, in particular, worried that female referees would feel verbally or physically abused. However, Palmer has been officiating without any major gender issues so far.

Palmer has officiated hundreds of NBA games, as well as others in the WNBA. In 2001, she established "Violet Palmer's Official Camp" to train youths in the art of refereeing. The camp runs annually from July 9 to July 11.

[edit] Trivia

Palmer has been the frequent target of sports critics, including ESPN columnist Bill Simmons who sharply complained about her officiating in various entries in his "More Cowbell" blog during 2004 and 2005.