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Friday, July 31, 2015

Premier League Referee Rankings for August 2015

Welcome to the first ever BPL referee rankings, where our 4 England based writers compile a ranking of the 17 Premier League referees. Correct predictions in green. Incorrect predictions in red.

1. Mike Dean
Dean has drawn the ire of many for his antics as a referee, such as making elaborate call signals, but he is the best referee in the BPL in our opinion. He always has good control on his matches as well as consistency in his decisions, and as a result he is often appointed for big matches. -- Bob Smith
Week 1 Prediction: Manchester United vs. Tottenham

Mike Dean, our top Premier League referee
2. Mark Clattenburg
Clattenburg can't seem to stop making headlines off the field, most recently getting suspended for going to an Ed Sheeran concert instead of traveling with his team last October, but on the field he is one of the best. Clattenburg uses his personality as an advantage in keeping games under control, and he could have been our top referee if it wasn't for a couple big mistakes last year. -- Harrison Johnson
Week 1 Prediction: Stoke vs. Liverpool

3. Martin Atkinson
Atkinson had a fantastic European season least year, refereeing the Europa League final, but two nightmares in the league put a damper on his season. The Burnley-Chelsea and Liverpool-Manchester United were considered two of the worst refereeing performances of the season by many and as a result Atkinson is behind Dean and Clattenburg. -- Neil Tyler
Week 1 Prediction: Bournemouth vs. Aston Villa

4. Anthony Taylor
Taylor struggled in the earlier stages of last season, with two big mistakes being a strange dive call against Cesc Fabregas as well as not awarding a penalty on a clear handball by Gary Cahill. However, since then Taylor has a been fantastic, refereeing the League Cup Final as well as being appointed to the 2015 Community Shield this weekend. Couple that with strong league performances in the second half of the year, and Taylor is definitely on the rise. -- Will Cole
Week 1 Prediction: Chelsea vs. Swansea

5. Michael Oliver
Oliver is an enigma for us. At times he seems to show that he is a top referee, but he often seems to be unable to really perform in big matches, specifically when he missed two stamps by Diego Costa in Chelsea-Liverpool and when he failed to award three penalties in Arsenal-Chelsea. For now, Oliver is barley in the top five. -- Bob Smith
Week 1 Prediction: Arsenal vs. West Ham

6. Lee Probert
Probert is really underrated as a referee in my opinion. He never really gets big matches, though he did referee Hull-Man United on the last day of the season, but he does seem to generally avoid controversy. If he got more big assignments, there is a good chance he could could move up our list. --Harrison Johnson
Week 1 Prediction: Norwich City vs. Crystal Palace

7. Phil Dowd
Dowd is not the most popular BPL referee (google Jose Mourinho Phil Dowd comments) but he is actually a very strong referee. Before his injury last season, Dowd was often assigned to important matches and did well, but since he is 52, fitness is the big question. -- Neil Tyler
Week 1 Prediction: 4th Official

8. Craig Pawson
Pawson quietly had a strong 2014-15 season, earning himself a FIFA badge, though few people noticed him, as he didn't get that many big appointments and stayed away from controversy. Last year was impressive from Pawson, and he can build off that this year. -- Will Cole
Week 1 Prediction: Leicester vs. Sunderland

9. Andre Marriner
Marriner has a very lenient style of refereeing, which can sometimes hurt him. He's a pretty decent referee but the lack of calling penalties has annoyed people. Looking at his performances from last season, he seems to be an average referee, which is where he is in our ranking. -- Bob Smith
Week 1 Prediction: Everton vs. Watford

10. Jonathan Moss
Moss has had a stellar BPL career, but last year was the first time he got appointed to a big match when he was the man in the middle for the FA Cup Final. Overall, Moss is a pretty good referee, but he struggles with consistency, which is a key area for improvement. -- Harrison Johnson
Week 1 Prediction: West Brom vs. Manchester City

11. Lee Mason
Mason was up and down last year performance-wise, but he made too many mistakes to be at the top of the list. His biggest area of improvement should be finding a consistent refereeing style so players have a better idea of how to play the game. Being inconsistent just draws frustration. -- Neil Tyler
Week 1 Prediction: Newcastle vs. Southampton

12. Neil Swarbrick
Swarbrick didn't see much action last year, and his season was defined by a mistaken identity case in Manchester City-West Bromwich Albion. So why is he still ahead of 5 referees? Because his season was otherwise pretty strong. Overall, Swarbrick had a good season with a couple things to work on. -- Will Cole
Week 1 Prediction: 4th Official

13. Roger East
East showed improvements last season, but he still made a lot of mistakes throughout the year, the most egregious being the red card shown to Wes Brown on a foul by John O'Shea that everyone assumed was mistaken identity, even though it turned out that it wasn't mistaken identity because East saw a ghost foul by Brown or something like that. That one still confuses me. -- Bob Smith
Week 1 Prediction: Football League Championship

14. Kevin Friend
If you like to see penalties get called, Kevin Friend won't be your friend. His style of being incredibly lenient in the area ended up coming back to bite him in the Liverpool-Southampton match, where he didn't call 3 potential penalties and a handball outside the box by Simon Mignolet, causing "Kevin Friend" to trend on twitter. I think many of those people who tweeted about Friend would agree with me when I say that he needs to be harsher next year if he wants to improve his standing. -- Harrison Johnson
Week 1 Prediction: 4th Official

15. Mike Jones
Unlike the man in front of him, Mike Jones is a very harsh referee. He got in trouble throughout the year for very tight penalty and red card decisions and could help himself this season by being a little more lenient in his decision making process. -- Neil Tyler
Week 1 Prediction: 4th Official

16. Robert Madley
We simply haven't seen enough from Madley to put him higher on the list, as he seems to get fewer games than any other select group referee. He's showed promise, but until we see more of him, we can't really see how strong a referee he is. -- Will Cole
Week 1 Prediction: 4th Official

17. Graham Scott
Scott is the newest Select Group referee so he has to start at the bottom until we see him in more games. He refereed one early Premier League game last season and had a good performance as well as making a strong second half cameo for Phil Dowd after an injury. I think he will be good, but for now, we just don't know yet. -- Bob Smith
Week 1 Prediction: 4th Official

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Friday, July 24, 2015

2015 Gold Cup Final and Third Place Matches Appointments


Joel Aguilar, assigned to his third consecutive Gold Cup final.


Final
July 26: Jamaica vs. Mexico
Referee: Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee: Juan Zumba (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee: CJ Morgante (United States)
Fourth Official: Jhon Pitti (Panama)
Reserve Assistant Referee: Leonel Leal (Costa Rica)

Third Place Match
July 25: United States vs. Panama
Referee: Oscar Moncada (Honduras)
Assistant Referee: Garnet Page (Jamaica)
Assistant Referee: Cristian Ramirez (Honduras)
Fourth Official: David Gantar (Canada)
Reserve Assistant Referee: Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

2015 Gold Cup Semifinal Appointments

Mark Geiger, who will referee Panama vs. Mexico

July 22: United States vs. Jamaica
Referee: Ricardo Montero (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Warner Castro (Costa Rica)
Fourth Official: Henry Bejarano (Costa Rica)

July 22: Panama vs. Mexico
Referee: Mark Geiger (United States)
Assistant Referee: Daniel Belleau (Canada)
Assistant Referee: Philippe Briere (Canada)
Fourth Official: Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)

Saturday, July 18, 2015

MLS Week 20 Reports: Stoppage time fireworks in Portland

Los Angeles 5-2 San Jose                  Referee: Alan Kelly (Ireland)
Kelly had two penalty calls to make in this match, and I think he got one of the two right. 
29th Minute: Steven Gerrard, playing in his first MLS match for Los Angeles, goes up for a high ball against Tommy Thompson in the San Jose box. Thompson's arm appears to incidentally hit Gerrard in the process, prompting a penalty call from Kelly. For me, this wasn't a penalty since Thompson's arm was in a natural motion.
80th Minute: LA's Baggio Husidic goes to get a rebound off SJ keeper David Bingham, but is tripped up by the diving keeper. Kelly calls a penalty, and I think there was enough contact to warrant that decision. Good call by Kelly.

Chicago 0-1 Columbus                       Referee: Ted Unkel (United States)
A very clean performance from Unkel in this match. Nice work by him and his crew.

Toronto 2-1 Philadelphia                    Referee: Jorge Gonzalez (United States)
Gonzalez had a pretty good match, but I would have liked to have seen a yellow for Damien Perquis' kick on CJ Sapong. It was accidental, but still was reckless and deserved a yellow. Overall, it was still a good match for Gonzalez.

New England 1-0 NYCFC                 Referee: Sorin Stoica (Canada)
Stoica continued his trend of strong performances, getting his one key call correct.
55th Minute: Ned Grabavoy of NYCFC misses the ball and sends his studs into Daigo Kobayashi's thigh. Stoica shows a red, and I agree since Grabavoy shouldn't have had his leg that high in the first place. Good call by Stoica.

Orlando 0-2 New York Red Bulls     Referee: Fotis Bazakos (United States)
Bazakos had one big call in this match, but I disagree with his call.
32nd Minute: Cyle Larin of Orlando slides in on Sacha Kljestan with his studs slightly exposed towards Kljestan's ankle. He clips Kljestan, but Bazakos and 4th Official Ted Unkel appear to decide that Larin deserves a red card for the foul. For me, you could make a case for a yellow, but certainly not a red.

Kansas City 2-1 Montreal                 Referee: Ricardo Salazar (United States)
Salazar had a quiet match, only needing to show 1 yellow card. Nice work by the veteran referee and his crew.

Dallas 2-1 DC United                        Referee: Allen Chapman (United States)
Very quiet game for Chapman, who also only showed 1 yellow in his match. Good job by him and his crew.

Seattle 0-1 Colorado                          Referee: Baldomero Toledo (United States)
Toledo continued the theme of quiet matches with a good performance in this fixture. Nothing to look at here.

Salt Lake 2-0 Houston                       Referee: Robert Sibiga (United States)
Sibiga, officially listed as a 4th Official, showed his first career red card in his second career MLS match.
51st Minute: Houston's Kofi Sarkodie slides in with studs up on Abdoulie Mansally. Sibiga shows a red card, and for me it's a no-brainer. Anytime you make contact on an opponent with your studs fully exposed it's a red. Good call by Sibiga.

Portland 1-1 Vancouver                      Referee: Juan Guzman (United States)
The first 90 minutes were quiet for Guzman, but two big events happened in stoppage time.
92nd Minute: Vancouver's Jordan Harvey loses the ball and in a moment of anger aggressively slides in on Diego Valeri with no intent to get the ball. Guzman shows him a red card and I agree. No place for that in a soccer game.
95th Minute: After the match, Portland's Will Johnson walks over to Guzman and begins to verbally abuse him. Guzman shows him a red card, and I think he did a good job not getting intimidated by Johnson and having the guts to discipline him.

Johnson confronts Guzman after the match
Columbus 3-1 Chicago                       Referee: Chris Penso (United States)
Penso had two big calls to make, and I don't have a problem with either of his decisions.
1st Minute: Penso calls the fastest penalty in MLS history when just eight seconds into the match Chicago goalkeeper Sean Johnson trips up Ethan Finlay in the area. The angle on the highlights made it hard to see, but it does look like Johnson did clip Finlay. Good call by Penso.
49th Minute: Chicago's Jason Johnson is already booked when he makes a clear dive inside the area. Penso shows him a second yellow, which is absolutely correct. Some people will complain that referees shouldn't show second yellows for dives, but I say it doesn't matter. The penalties should be consistent for all fouls regardless of where they are.

Thanks for reading!

2015 Gold Cup Quarterfinals Appointments

Walter Lopez, who will referee Mexico vs. Costa Rica

July 18: United States vs. Cuba
Referee: Henry Bejarano (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Warner Castro (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Leonel Leal (Costa Rica)
Fourth Official: Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)

July 18: Haiti vs. Jamaica
Referee: Cesar Ramos (Mexico)
Assistant Referee: Alberto Morin (Mexico)
Assistant Referee: Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)
Fourth Official: Jhon Pitti (Panama)

July 19: Trinidad & Tobago vs. Panama
Referee: Hector Rodriguez (Honduras)
Assistant Referee: Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)
Assistant Referee: Juan Zumba (El Salvador)
Fourth Official: Oscar Moncada (Honduras)

July 19: Mexico vs. Costa Rica
Referee: Walter Lopez (Guatemala)
Assistant Referee: Eric Boria (United States)
Assistant Referee: CJ Morgante (United States)
Fourth Official: David Gantar (Canada)

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Gold Cup Group Stage Reports Update

We decided to try something new for this tournament and create a digital report for our youtube channel. We thought this would give you a chance to visualize the calls we write about. Feel free to give us your feedback.
Matchday 1 Reports: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5-z67NpMJg
Matchday 2 Reports: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPo25Dm0gvg
Matchday 3 Reports: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3U8wtreISc
Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-sNt4KEXMqnnOk7H1h0YfQ

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

2015 Gold Cup Group Stage Appointments (Matches 1-18)


Cesar Ramos, who refereed United States vs. Honduras on July 7

Group A
July 7: Panama vs. Haiti
Referee: Henry Bejarano (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Leonel Leal (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Warner Castro (Costa Rica)
Fourth Official: Ricardo Montero (Costa Rica)

July 7: United States vs. Honduras
Referee: Cesar Ramos (Mexico)
Assistant Referee: Alberto Morin (Mexico)
Assistant Referee: Garnet Page (Jamaica)
Fourth Official: Roberto Garcia (Mexico)

July 10: Honduras vs. Panama
Referee: Marlon Mejia (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee: Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica)
Assistant Referee: Garnet Page (Jamaica)
Fourth Official: Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)

July 10: United States vs. Haiti
Referee: Ricardo Montero (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Warner Castro (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Jose Camargo (Mexico)
Fourth Official: Roberto Garcia (Mexico)

July 13: Haiti vs. Honduras
Referee: Joel Aguilar (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee: Ricardo Morgan (Jamaica)
Assistant Referee: Garnet Page (Jamaica)
Fourth Official: Marlon Mejia (El Salvador)

July 13: Panama vs. United States
Referee: Roberto Garcia (Mexico)
Assistant Referee: Alberto Morin (Mexico)
Assistant Referee: Leonel Leal (Costa Rica)
Fourth Official: Henry Bejarano (Costa Rica)

Group B
July 8: Costa Rica vs. Jamaica
Referee: Fernando Guerrero (Mexico)
Assistant Referee: Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)
Assistant Referee: Christian Ramirez (Honduras)
Fourth Official: Yadel Martinez (Cuba)

July 8: El Salvador vs. Canada
Referee: Oscar Moncada (Honduras)
Assistant Referee: Daniel Williamson (Panama)
Assistant Referee: CJ Morgante (United States)
Fourth Official: Hector Rodriguez (Honduras)

July 11: Jamaica vs. Canada
Referee: Yadel Martinez (Cuba)
Assistant Referee: Hiran Dopico (Cuba)
Assistant Referee: Cristian Ramirez (Honduras)
Fourth Official: Oscar Moncada (Honduras)

July 11: Costa Rica vs. El Salvador
Referee: Jair Marrufo (United States)
Assistant Referee: CJ Morgante (United States)
Assistant Referee: Gerson Lopez (Guatemala)
Fourth Official: Walter Lopez (Guatemala)

July 14: Jamaica vs. El Salvador
Referee: Walter Lopez (Guatemala)
Assistant Referee: Hermenerito Leal (Guatemala)
Assistant Referee: Gerson Lopez (Guatemala)
Fourth Official: Fernando Guerrero (Mexico)

July 14: Costa Rica vs. Canada
Referee: Hector Rodriguez (Honduras)
Assistant Referee: CJ Morgante (United States)
Assistant Referee: Daniel Williamson (Panama)
Fourth Official: Jair Marrufo (United States)

Group C
July 9: Trinidad & Tobago vs. Guatemala
Referee: Jhon Pitti (Panama)
Assistant Referee: Eric Boria (United States)
Assistant Referee: Philippe Briere (Canada)
Fourth Official: Mark Geiger (United States)

July 9: Mexico vs. Cuba
Referee: Walter Quesada (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Juan Zumba (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee: Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)
Fourth Official: Armando Castro (Honduras)

July 12: Trinidad & Tobago vs. Cuba
Referee: David Gantar (Canada)
Assistant Referee: Philippe Briere (Canada)
Assistant Referee: Daniel Belleau (Canada)
Fourth Official: Elmer Bonilla (El Salvador)

July 12: Guatemala vs. Mexico
Referee: Armando Castro (Honduras)
Assistant Referee: Octavio Jara (Costa Rica)
Assistant Referee: Juan Zumba (El Salvador)
Fourth Official: Walter Quesada (Costa Rica)

July 15: Cuba vs. Guatemala
Referee: Elmer Bonilla (El Salvador)
Assistant Referee: Philippe Briere (Canada)
Assistant Referee: Daniel Belleau (Canada)
Fourth Official: David Gantar (Canada)

July 15: Trinidad & Tobago vs. Mexico
Referee: Mark Geiger (United States)
Assistant Referee: Eric Boria (United States)
Assistant Referee: Peter Manikowski (United States)
Fourth Official: Jhon Pitti (Panama)

Monday, July 6, 2015

Cuneyt Cakir is our June Referee of the Month

Çakir
The award couldn't really go to anyone besides the CL Final referee, could it? It was an easy decision for us since Turkish referee Cüneyt Çakir put in a good performance in one of the most high-stakes matches of the year. Congratulations to Çakir on a fine month of June!

Sunday, July 5, 2015

MLS Week 18 Reports: Kaka sees red for stomp on Morales

Seattle 1-0 DC United                             Referee: Silviu Petrescu (Canada)
Petrescu had a strong match with just one key call coming his way.
27th Minute: DC's Fabian Espindola throws an elbow at Zach Scott while trying to shield the ball. Petrescu shows Espindola a straight red and I agree since according to laws of the game throwing elbows is red card offense. Good call by the veteran referee.

Houston 1-1 Chicago                              Referee: Fotis Bazakos (United States)
Good game from Bazakos with not all that much controversy to speak of. Good match by him and his crew.

Montreal 1-2 NYCFC                             Referee: Jorge Gonzalez (United States)
Gonzalez had a very good match with not much controversy. Just one play to look at from this match.
76th Minute: Thomas McNamara of NYCFC tries to hand check a Montreal player in the box but gets his outstretched hand hit by the bouncing ball. Gonzalez calls a penalty, and I agree because McNamara's arm was in an unnatural position when it was hit by the ball.

Columbus 2-1 New York Red Bulls       Referee: Juan Guzman (United States)
Guzman had a strong performance with not much controversy. Good work by the young American ref.

Dallas 3-0 New England                         Referee: Baldomero Toledo (United States)
Good match from Toledo with no controversy. Good work by the veteran MLS referee.

Colorado 2-1 Vancouver                         Referee: Ismail Elfath (United States)
Elfath, recently selected to referee the MLS All-Star Game, had another stellar performance in a strong year. Nothing to look at from this match.

Salt Lake 1-1 Orlando                              Referee: Sorin Stoica (Canada)
Stoica had one key call to make in this matchup and I think he nailed it.
45th Minute: Orlando's Brazilian superstar Kaka puts a little too much contact on Javier Morales and knocks him to the ground. After Morales goes to ground, Kaka follows through with a stomp on his calf, prompting a red card from Stoica. For me, the call is a no-brainer given that Kaka was looking straight at Morales's calf during the stomp, but I have to commend Stoica on the guts it took to send off the man who could be the league's most popular player.

Sorin Stoica shows Kaka his first MLS red card

LA Galaxy 4-0 Toronto                            Referee: Chris Penso (United States)
Penso had another good match to add to what has been a clean season so far for him. Just one play to look at from this one.
8th Minute: LA's Sebastian Lletjet is dribbling towards goal in the penalty area when he is clipped from behind by Warren Creavalle. Easy penalty call for Penso, who correctly points to the spot.

Portland 1-0 San Jose                              Referee: Ricardo Salazar (United States)
Salazar had a quiet game with little controversy and nothing to go in depth on.

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

2015 Copa América Final and Third Place Referee Appointments


Wilmar Roldan, who will referee the final between Chile and Argentina

FINAL
July 4: Chile vs. Argentina
Referee: Wilmar Roldán (Colombia)
Assistant Referee: Alexander Guzmán (Colombia)
Assistant Referee: Cristian De La Cruz (Colombia)
Fourth Official: José Argote (Venezuela)
Fifth Official: Christian Lescano (Ecuador)

Third Place Match
July 3: Peru vs. Paraguay
Referee: Raúl Orosco (Bolivia)
Assistant Referee: Javier Bustillos (Bolivia)
Assistant Referee: Juan Montaño (Bolivia)
Fourth Official: Andrés Cunha (Uruguay)
Fifth Official: Mauricio Espinosa (Uruguay)

Congratulations to the selected officials!