Tag Archives: referee

Spotify CEO on Apple and Google: ‘If You Want to Be the Referee, You Can’t Also Be the Player’ – MacRumors

  1. Spotify CEO on Apple and Google: ‘If You Want to Be the Referee, You Can’t Also Be the Player’ MacRumors
  2. Here’s what Spotify boss Daniel Ek finds insane about Apple and Google PhoneArena
  3. Spotify CEO once again slams Apple’s ‘insane’ control over the internet 9to5Mac
  4. Spotify’s CEO Slams Tech Titans Apple And Google, Calls For Swift AI Regulation Overhaul – Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG), Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Spotify Technology (NYSE:SPOT) Benzinga
  5. Spotify CEO Daniel Ek warns laws trying to regulate AI would quickly become obsolete Fortune
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Jurgen Klopp voices more frustration with referee, VAR after Liverpool draw vs Aston Villa – The Athletic

  1. Jurgen Klopp voices more frustration with referee, VAR after Liverpool draw vs Aston Villa The Athletic
  2. Liverpool v. Aston Villa | PREMIER LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS | 5/20/2023 | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  3. HIGHLIGHTS: Liverpool 1-1 Aston Villa | FIRMINO scores late on emotional farewell Liverpool FC
  4. Unai Emery proud of Aston Villa as European bid goes to Premier League final day The Athletic
  5. Explained: Why Cody Gakpo’s equaliser for Liverpool against Aston Villa was ruled out by VAR – despite the ball coming off Ezri Konsa in the build-up Goal.com
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Liverpool vs Arsenal assistant referee Constantine Hatzidakis accused of elbowing Andy Robertson – The Athletic

  1. Liverpool vs Arsenal assistant referee Constantine Hatzidakis accused of elbowing Andy Robertson The Athletic
  2. Watch Linesman Constantine Hatzidakis Elbow Liverpool Defender Andy Robertson Sports Illustrated
  3. WATCH: Linesman ELBOWS Liverpool defender Andy Robertson to spark half-time melee at Anfield Goal.com
  4. (Video) Robertson’s ‘stunned’ 15-word tunnel rant after shocking assistant elbow incident Empire of The Kop
  5. Roy Keane Calls Andy Robertson A “Big Baby” After His Reaction To Being Elbowed By Assistant Referee Constantine Hatzidakis Sports Illustrated
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Video: Referee blindly allows bout to continue with unconscious fighter, who then awakes and taps to horrific… – MMA Fighting

  1. Video: Referee blindly allows bout to continue with unconscious fighter, who then awakes and taps to horrific… MMA Fighting
  2. Disturbing video: Fighter passes out, takes prolonged damage after incompetent referee refuses to stop fight MMA Mania
  3. ‘He’s out! He’s out!’: Referee watches as choked-out fighter wakes up to tap from armbar Yahoo Sports
  4. Disturbing: Negligent referee lets unconscious fighter get choked, armbarred msnNOW
  5. Texas commission, referee under fire for ‘stupidity’ at Fury FC 76 MMA Junkie
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“MASSIVE FINE!” Andy Townsend SLAMS Fulham’s Mitrovic for Confronting Referee Chris Kavanagh! – talkSPORT

  1. “MASSIVE FINE!” Andy Townsend SLAMS Fulham’s Mitrovic for Confronting Referee Chris Kavanagh! talkSPORT
  2. VAR Review: Unpacking Fulham’s 3 red cards at Man United, Newcastle’s offside goal ESPN
  3. OLD TRAFFORD FRENZY! Manchester United vs. Fulham | FA Cup Highlights | ESPN FC ESPN FC
  4. Opinion: Sancho handed perfect opportunity to impress Ten Hag during international break Stretty News
  5. FA urged to hand Aleksandar Mitrovic “at least a six-game ban” for Man Utd incident amid calls for Fulham striker’s season to end Goal.com
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‘It’ll Be Fun, No?!’ Mic’d Up NHL Goalie Caught on Tape Pleading With Referee To Let Him Fight Opposing Goalie – Mediaite

  1. ‘It’ll Be Fun, No?!’ Mic’d Up NHL Goalie Caught on Tape Pleading With Referee To Let Him Fight Opposing Goalie Mediaite
  2. Blues’ Jordan Binnington suspended two games without pay after throwing punch at Wild’s Ryan Hartman Fox News
  3. Watch: Marc-Andre Fleury mic’d up during attempt to fight Jordan Binnington Sports Illustrated
  4. Bernie Bits: Berserk Binnington, A Busy Saturday St. Louis City SC, Battlehawks, Praise For Dennis Gates, Raves For Masyn Winn. – Scoops Scoops with Danny Mac
  5. Is Jordan Binnington the NHL’s most hated player? | The Drop NHL on ESPN
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Barcelona paid £1.2m to referee chief’s company between 2016 and 2018 – The Athletic

  1. Barcelona paid £1.2m to referee chief’s company between 2016 and 2018 The Athletic
  2. Barcelona release statement after reports reveal investigation into €1.4m payment to vice-president of Spanish Referees Committee Goal.com
  3. FC Barcelona May Face La Liga Relegation Following $1.5 Million Referee Payment Allegations, Denies Wrongdoing Forbes
  4. Barcelona involved in potential scandal involving large payments to former VP of referees—report Managing Madrid
  5. Former Barcelona president issues statement denying police allegations Football Espana
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Referee for Argentina vs. Netherlands World Cup Match Sent Home

Following his controversial decisions in the heated Argentina vs. Netherlands match for the Qatar World Cup quarterfinals, Spanish referee Antonio Mateu Lahoz has reportedly been released from the tournament while the game’s VAR officials will still be given the option to participate in future competitions.

The game which has been coined the “Battle of Lusail,” ended 2-2 in extra time and was ultimately decided in a penalty shootout which Argentina ultimately claimed the victory (4-3). During the match, the La Liga referee issued a record of 18 yellow cards and one red.

At one point in the game, midfielder Leandro Paredes kicked the ball into the Netherlands bench with Dutch captain Virgil van Dijk responding by bumping him into the ground, resulting in multiple bookings as the game seemed to spiral out of control. By the end of the competition, two of Argentina’s coaching staff were given cards and three players were booked during the penalty shootouts.

In a post-match interview, Argentina captain Lionel Messi expressed his frustration and asked FIFA to look into the issue.

“I don’t want to speak about referees because they will sanction you. But people saw what happened. I think FIFA must take care of this. It cannot put a referee like that for a match of such magnitude, of such importance. The referee cannot fail to be up to the task,” he said.

FIFA has also announced that Argentine referees Fernando Rapallani and Facundo Tello will not be given any more matches for the rest of the tournament due to a conflict of interest as Argentina advances to the semis.

Elsewhere in sports, adidas unveils the “Al Hilm” Qatar World Cup Finals ball.

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Stéphanie Frappart to make history as the first woman to referee a men’s World Cup match



CNN
 — 

When a referee generates column inches, it is normally some indictment of their performance; the result of an uproar after a controversial decision.

But Stéphanie Frappart’s traditional anonymity has been broken for a different reason – she will make history on Thursday as the first woman to referee a men’s World Cup match.

Alongside assistants Neuza Back from Brazil and Karen Diaz from Mexico, the Frenchwoman will form part of an all-female refereeing trio officiating Costa Rica vs. Germany in their Group E match.

Six female match officials have been officiating at this World Cup – referees Frappart, Rwanda’s Salima Mukansanga and Japan’s Yoshimi Yamashita as well as assistant referees Back, Diaz and Kathryn Nesbitt of the US.

FIFA announced their appointment back in May, when Frappart found out that she was going to the 2022 Qatar World Cup.

“It’s a surprise, you cannot believe it and after two or three minutes, you realize that you are going to the World Cup. It’s amazing, not only for me, but also for my family and also for the French referees,” she tells CNN Sport.

Throughout her career, Frappart has achieved a seemingly endless series of firsts.

In 2019, she became the first female referee to take charge of a Ligue 1 match, in August 2019 the first to take charge of a major men’s European match, and in 2020, the first to officiate a men’s UEFA Champions League match.

“I knew that my life changed after 2019 because most people recognized me in the street,” Frappart recalls.

“So I am like a role model, for women referees but I think it [also] inspired some women in society or in companies to take more and more responsibility.”

Already at this World Cup, Frappart has been the fourth official on two occasions – becoming the first female official at a men’s World Cup match at Mexico vs. Poland. Mukasanga and Yamashita have also been the fourth official at two and four games of this World Cup respectively.

But there is an obvious tension between these historic moments for gender equality in football and the place in which they are happening as women’s rights are severely restricted in Qatar.

According to Amnesty International, women remain tied to a male guardian in Qatar– usually their father, brother, grandfather, uncle or husband – and require their permission for important decisions such as marrying, accessing reproductive healthcare and working in many government jobs.

CNN has reached out to the Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy (SC) for comment but at the time of publication had not received a response.

“I was many times in Qatar … for the preparation of the World Cup, I was always welcomed in a good way. I don’t know how life is there but I didn’t make the decision to go there or to organize the World Cup,” Frappart says.

“So now, 10 years after, it’s difficult to say something, but I hope that … this World Cup will improve life for women there.”

At the World Cup, on football’s biggest stage, the pressure of refereeing a game is at its most intense.

A referee might make 245 decisions in a single game, Sky Sports estimates, and if just one is wrong, it will be analyzed in microscopic detail.

It could alter the course of a game, or even a team’s World Cup – denying it a title or ensuring it progresses no further in the tournament.

“When you make a mistake, it’s more important than if a player makes a mistake – there are more consequences for the teams,” Frappart says. “It’s also easy to say that it’s the fault of the referee and not the fault of our team so when you lose.”

As referees work their way up to the highest echelons of the game, this pressure changes.

“It’s more from the media and [about] the money because you know that every decision is important and will make a difference for the team,” Frappart says. “But when you start in the local clubs, it’s more difficult with the spectators and with the environment.”

Inevitably, female referees are heavily scrutinized too as they straddle two traditionally male-dominated fields: football and leadership.

“There were many questions involved if she’s there because she’s a woman, perhaps she will not follow the game and everything,” Frappart recalls when she made her debut in Ligue 1.

“It’s not only in football, but I think in every job when you’re a woman … you need to prove that you have the quality and after that they let you continue.”

But as Frappart refereed more matches, the stance towards her changed.

“Now, it’s not a question of gender. It’s now only a question about steel, [about] competencies. So now it’s ok, after one or two games, they left me alone and without any more media around.”

When Frappart first began playing football at ten years old in 1993, women’s football barely registered as a significant landmark on the sporting landscape.

The inaugural edition of the women’s World Cup had been held just two years previously, with great success in China, but there was neither a women’s Champions League in Europe nor a National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL) in the USA and professional female referees were non-existent.

It was only in 2017 when Bibiana Steinhaus took charge of a Bundesliga match that a woman officiated a top-level men’s league match.

Frappart’s appointment as a referee at a men’s World Cup is another step forward in a “very sexist sport,” Costa Rica manager Luis Fernando said, according to Reuters.

“It’s very difficult to reach the point that she has reached, I think it’s good for football and a positive step for football, to show that it’s opening up for everyone,” he added.

Similarly, in Rwanda, Mukansanga recalls never seeing a female referee to use as a role model for her own aspirations.

“I worked hard and followed the men’s dreams because they were the people surrounding me,” she tells CNN Sport.

“They’re all men. We had one World Cup referee here in Rwanda who went to the World Cup twice so he inspired me a lot and I kept working hard to be like him.”

With women refereeing and the matches at the Qatar World Cup broadcast to huge audiences worldwide, Frappart hopes that it will encourage more women to pick up a whistle.

Already this change is beginning to take place – in the UK alone, there was a 72% increase in qualified women referees between 2016 and 2020, according to the FA.

“So if you have more referees on the TV perhaps it might make it easier for women to say, okay, this is possible. Because if you don’t know if it’s possible for us, you cannot say: ‘Okay, I want to be a referee.’”

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Referee Chris Rooney trolled for speech before Rangers-Lightning game

The Rangers season got off to a strange start on Tuesday.

Ahead of the Rangers-Lighting opener at MSG — the first stateside game of the season — veteran referee Chris Rooney delivered an awkward welcome speech before dropping the puck that had NHL Twitter in hysterics.

“To our great players and great fans, welcome to opening night of the 2022-23 regular season,” Rooney said while standing at center ice. “What’s better than this? Good luck to all players. Let’s have a great season.”

Players from both teams awkwardly stood on the ice until Rooney dropped the puck. The unusual impromptu moment made for a memorable start to the 2022-23 season.

“Everything about this is funny,” one person tweeted. “From the dull delivery, the ‘what’s better than this,’ to Chris Rooney being called one of the best in the league. The NHL is back.”

NHL referee Chris Rooney delivers a pre-puck drop welcome speech before the Rangers-Lightning game at Madison Square Garden on Oct. 11, 2022.
Twitter

“I cannot believe they made Chris Rooney do that,” another person tweeted. “I would have died if I was about to take the faceoff lol.”

One person said that they had “second hand embarrassment” for Rooney during his speech.

Others enjoyed Rooney’s pre-puck drop speech, with one person tweeting, “I need to hear Chris Rooney’s thoughts before every faceoff.”

Referee Chris Rooney officiates a game between the Chicago Blackhawks and the Vegas Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena on Dec. 10, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Referee Chris Rooney announces a call during Game 2 of the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals between the Boston Bruins and the St. Louis Blues on May 29, 2019, at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts.

It’s unclear how exactly Rooney’s speech came to fruition.

The Rangers defeated the Lightning, 3-1, in a highly anticipated rematch of the 2021-22 Eastern Conference finals. The Rangers visit the Minnesota Wild on Thursday.



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