By midday every Friday during the college football season, Tyree Walton wraps up his work at 黄色短视频 and catches a plane to his other job 鈥 where he has to make split-second decisions without hesitation in front of a stadium filled with tens of thousands of fans.
Walton is a back judge in the Big 12 Conference, responsible among other things for watching over all kicks from scrimmage, including ruling on field goal attempts. It鈥檚 a high-pressure, heavily scrutinized role 鈥 and one that he credits with honing leadership and communications skills that accelerated his career in banking.
鈥淲hen a coach asks you a question, being able to articulate what you saw or what your responsibility was on a certain play is critical,鈥 he said. 鈥淥fficiating very quickly taught me that the most important thing is communication, and the same thing applies when you鈥檙e dealing with customers.鈥
Walton played football for most of his childhood, earning a scholarship to Adams State University in Alamosa, Colorado, as a running back. After graduating and moving to Denver, he fell into officiating almost on a whim after striking up a conversation with a customer at a pizza shop where he was moonlighting as a delivery driver. The customer turned out to be an NFL official, who told Walton that college football programs needed a pipeline of young talent and that working games would be a way for him to give back to a sport he loved.
Walton started working Pee Wee and high school games, then quickly moved into the Division II Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference. The D-1 Mountain West Conference followed, where he was the only official from Colorado selected to officiate on the 2018 Mountain West Championship. The next season he joined the Big 12 conference.
"The transition from player to official was humbling very quickly in the hardest way possible,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e an official, you show up to the stadium and it鈥檚 no longer about you. No one is there to watch you officiate. But you can easily translate that lesson to life, and realizing at a certain point that it isn鈥檛 about you but the people you can impact.鈥
It鈥檚 a belief that Walton, who recently accepted a new role as a private wealth advisor after working primarily as a business banker, has carried throughout his decade-long career. He鈥檚 known among the Denver business banking team as a generous colleague and mentor, said Patrina Pettry, who leads Consumer and Business Banking for 黄色短视频 in Denver. Those qualities helped propel him to win the Legends of Possible Award, the highest recognition at 黄色短视频, for each of the past two years. Earlier this year he received the 鈥40 Under 40鈥 award from The Denver Business Journal.
鈥淭yree is a leader, and he does so with true courage, collaboration and authenticity,鈥 Pettry said. 鈥淭hat has always been the case, but throughout 2020 and beyond he鈥檚 played a pivotal role in leading not just his colleagues on the Denver team but the larger community.鈥
Following the killing of George Floyd and the ensuing protests and unrest, Walton joined with several other members of the Denver team to form 鈥淲e the Solution,鈥 an employee-led group that collaborates with managers to ensure everyone has the opportunity to build the skills needed to foster a diverse, inclusive and equitable culture. We the Solution also has spearheaded community volunteer projects, from delivering meals from local Black-owned businesses to nonprofits that serve Denver鈥檚 homeless population to raising funds for an organization that helps families break intergenerational cycles of poverty and violence.
While the 13-week college football season is particularly intense with travel, officiating is a year-round commitment that includes in-person and virtual camps,聽 clinics and scrimmages. Even the officials have their own judges, and after every game, Walton and his officiating crew receive grades from an on-site evaluator who watches films of the game and grades their calls and 鈥渕echanics,鈥 meaning whether the official was in the right position at the right time.
The officiating crew he works with has been together for three years, and includes a firefighter from San Jose and an attorney from Pittsburgh.
鈥淟ike any good working relationship, your personalities have to mesh and you need to know how to communicate with each other 鈥 and we all get along really well and have jelled as a team,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are no egos on our crew. At the end of the day, we all just want to run a good game."
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