the referee who wrongly sent
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Mar 27, 2014 19:39:49 GMT -5
Post by the referee who wrongly sent on Mar 27, 2014 19:39:49 GMT -5
Andre Marriner, the referee who wrongly sent off Arsenal’s Kieran Gibbs during Chelsea’s 6-0 win last Saturday, has admitted he could not get the blunder out of his mind in the days following the Stamford Bridge fiasco. Speaking publicly for the first-time since he dismissed Gibbs instead of Arsenal team-mate Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain in a case of mistaken identity, Marriner confirmed he had thought about little else in the days that followed. He said: “It knocks you for six to be honest. There’s a lot of talk out there that referees make decisions, go home and don’t care about it but that’s so far from the truth. Mercurial GS shoes“You’re continuously playing the incident over in your mind. You think about how you could’ve arrived at the right decision and ‘what could I have done differently?’ “You draw from all these other different sorts of aspects to try and find the reason why you’ve made a mistake but equally the best thing you can do is try to park it and move on because this incident happened in the 15th minute of the game. Afterwards I analysed it to death.” Ronaldo 7 shoes
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The Football Association resci
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Mar 27, 2014 19:41:23 GMT -5
Post by The Football Association resci on Mar 27, 2014 19:41:23 GMT -5
The Football Association rescinded Gibbs’s red card and did not punish Oxlade-Chamberlain. The Birmingham-based Marriner admitted he had taken solace from the support of his peers within the elite Select Group of Referees, and the Professional Game Match Officials’ Limited decision not to withdraw him from service this weekend, when he will officiate the Premier League match between Southampton and Newcastle. Mercurial vaporHe said: “I made a high profile mistake last weekend but it’s like a player who misses a penalty or goalkeeper who fails to make an easy save, you want to get back out there the week after to put those demons right. “I’m delighted by the [PGMOL] decision, it shows what my bosses think of me as a referee and hopefully I won’t let them down and I’ll be able go out on Saturday and perform at my usual high standard. puma-evospeed-1“I’ve met all my colleagues this week so I’ve received a little bit of banter from them which has been good natured. I’ve been down in the dumps and it’s made me smile and hopefully I’ve got my mojo back. “You’ve got to draw on your experience and look at the good things you’ve achieved over a number of years. I took charge of the FA Cup final last year and you’ve got to take strength of character from that as it’s the biggest game in English club football. “I achieved that by doing things right so you draw from those experiences and it’s about getting back out there and putting things right. The players experience the same things we do when they go home and think can they do better and as a referee I’m no different.” On Thursday Marriner talked to young players about the perils of their career at an event organised by League Football Education and backed by the Football League and the Professional Footballers’ Association. In a fiercely competitive industry, around 60 per cent of youth-team players will be lost to football as 18-year-olds. The first cull will take place over the next few weeks when those approaching the end of their apprenticeships find out if they have earned a professional deal for next term. Even then half of those who do win a full-time contract will not be playing at a professional level by the age of 21 with just 15 per cent remaining. Yet Marriner is convinced that these youngsters should not be lost to the game and was instead working as part of a joint PGMOL and Football Association initiative to convince the 800 or so attendees that their attributes could be put to good use as a referee. “A lot of it is man management skills but they’ve got a good knowledge of the game itself, “Marriner added. “They have the physical prowess and while the laws of the game theory work is slightly different to what they know once that has been learnt, their football background can help them go on to become really good referees.”
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We know at this club that we n
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Mar 27, 2014 19:42:40 GMT -5
Post by We know at this club that we n on Mar 27, 2014 19:42:40 GMT -5
He is finding his feet and finding his confidence. I think it’s important his all-round game improves from where he is right now. world cup brasil “I think he has had some good displays for us, but I think there’s more to come. I hope between now and the end of the year that he shows that. “We know at this club that we need strikers and I’m hoping he can tick a box for us between now and the end of the season. “To get him back to where he was is a process and that’s the process he’s going through. Our fans need to give him a bit of time and understanding because there is definitely a pedigree there. “But, at the end of this period he will have had three-and-a-half months with us and he needs to be pretty close to his best if we are going to sign him.” hypervenom-phelon
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Inter coach Walter Mazzarri fe
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Mar 27, 2014 19:56:49 GMT -5
Post by Inter coach Walter Mazzarri fe on Mar 27, 2014 19:56:49 GMT -5
Ronaldo 7 shoesInter were frustrated at San Siro, following up just their second home league loss of the season on Sunday with another disappointing result. They were slow to get going but dominated the last 30 minutes, with Danilo D'Ambrosio going closest when he had a late header cleared off the line. Mazzarri told Sky Sport Italia: "I didn't like the first half, let me be honest. Udinese are a strong side who pressed us all over the field and closed down all the spaces. "In the second half we deserved to score at least two or three goals, especially in the last half-hour. We tired Udinese out, dominated and then simply didn't score. Mercurial GS shoes"At times there are errors in finishing, but at others there are elements we cannot control, such as the woodwork or the opposition goalkeeper. When we start playing the way we can, we create an incredible number of chances. "In the second half I took Hernanes deeper, but wanted two against one on Udinese's left flank, using Jonathan and Ricky Alvarez. They hadn't predicted that and struggled. "The important thing was to win and the team did everything possible to win. In my view they fully deserved a victory." Udinese coach Francesco Guidolin admitted his side were under significant late pressure but was proud that they were able to hold on. "The first half went as planned, only that we failed to score. It was what I expected and had hoped for," Guidolin said. "During the second half we got deeper and deeper, had a moment in which I changed the tactical system because Inter had adjusted and they were pushing to the very end. "From the hour mark onwards it was a very difficult game and we were suffering, though that was understandable against a side like Inter. "We did well to defend, had a bit of luck and if we had always shown that attitude then I think we’d now have four or five more points that could've allowed us to look at Europe."
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