RefereeBench: Are Video MLLMs Ready to be Multi-Sport Referees
For researchers and practitioners in multimodal AI, this benchmark reveals a critical gap in MLLMs' ability to apply domain-specific rules and temporal reasoning, highlighting the need for improved integration of domain knowledge.
The paper introduces RefereeBench, the first large-scale benchmark for evaluating MLLMs as automatic sports referees across 11 sports. Even the strongest models achieve only ~60% accuracy, showing current MLLMs are far from reliable for rule-grounded decision-making.
While Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) excel at generic video understanding, their ability to support specialized, rule-grounded decision-making remains insufficiently explored. In this paper, we introduce RefereeBench, the first large-scale benchmark for evaluating MLLMs as automatic sports referees. Spanning 11 sports with 925 curated videos and 6,475 QA pairs, RefereeBench evaluates five core officiating abilities: foul existence, foul and penalty classification, foul and penalty reasoning, entity perception, and temporal grounding. The benchmark is fully human-annotated to ensure high-quality annotations grounded in authentic officiating logic and multimodal evidence. Extensive evaluations of state-of-the-art MLLMs show that even the strongest models, such as Doubao-Seed-1.8 and Gemini-3-Pro, achieve only around 60% accuracy, while the strongest open-source model, Qwen3-VL, reaches only 47%. These results indicate that current models remain far from being reliable sports referees. Further analysis shows that while models can often identify incidents and involved entities, they struggle with rule application and temporal grounding, and frequently over-call fouls on normal clips. Our benchmark highlights the need for future MLLMs that better integrate domain knowledge and multimodal understanding, advancing trustworthy AI-assisted officiating and broader multimodal decision-making.