guildford€¦ · forward. there [s nothing like being in control. the end of another season is...

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www.guildfordreferees.co.uk/ GUILDFORD REFEREES’ SOCIETY (Founded 1925) May NEWSLETTER 2016 Please try and attend. The next meeting will be at Godalming Town FC, Monday, May 9 th 7:30 for a 7:45pm Start.

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Page 1: GUILDFORD€¦ · forward. There [s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last

www.guildfordreferees.co.uk/

GUILDFORD REFEREES’ SOCIETY

(Founded 1925)

May NEWSLETTER

2016

Please try and attend.

The next meeting will be at

Godalming Town FC, Monday, May 9th 7:30 for a 7:45pm Start.

Page 2: GUILDFORD€¦ · forward. There [s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last

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Life Vice Presidents:-

Chris Burgess,

Ray Cotton M.S.A.,

Brian Fish M.S.A.

Geoffrey Comley,

Derek Hart O.B.E.

Ken Mills,

Brian Pearce M.S.A.

Vic Rolland,

Mike Topping,

Bernie West,

Cyril West M.S.A.

George White.

John Thornton M.S.A

Vice Presidents:-

Derek Berry,

Norman Brice,

Rex Faulkner,

Colin Henderson,

Phil Tilbury.

OFFICERS and COMMITTEE MEMBERS: 20015-16

President:

Adrian Freeman 01483 894351

[email protected]

Chairman:

Tristan Greaves [email protected]

Vice Chairman:

Steve Ferris 01483 567985

[email protected]

Honorary Secretary:

Brian Fish M.S.A. 01483 420007

[email protected]

Honorary Treasurer:

Bob Dick [email protected]

Hon. Retention Officer:

Geoff Comley 01483 568577

[email protected]

Hon. Magazine Editor:

Roger Hall 01483 892218

[email protected]

Committee Members:

Life Vice-President:

Ray Cotton 01483 422560

[email protected]

Life Vice-President:

Vic Rolland 01483 503631

[email protected]

Shelby Elson

[email protected]

Page 3: GUILDFORD€¦ · forward. There [s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last

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Official Website:- Official Website:-

GUILDFORD REFEREES SOCIETY www.guildfordreferees.co.uk www.refereesassociation.co.uk

………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

EDITOR’S COMMENTS Roger Hall

[email protected]

“Another Roger Rant”

A fantastic guest speaker last month, Michael Webb showed us clips from games he had refereed to see if we agreed that tackles that occurred during the game warranted a yellow or red card. Very interesting and thank you to some old and new faces that boosted are numbers into double figures, but it would have been nice to see a few more. AGM this month which more importantly means fish ‘n chips and don’t forget the tomato sauce this year Bob. Don’t forget we’re looking for a new Chairman, so if you fancy a go at the big chair, put yourself forward. There’s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last game as a referee will be on the 22nd May and fittingly it will be Dunsfold, the same ground I refereed my first game some 16 and a half years ago. Somehow I don’t think it will go ahead being so late but I’m hoping it will. So if I don’t see you at the AGM and a great summer and then YOU do it all again next season.

The Perfect Storm I would like to tell you why you should never referee a team on a regular basis. I had refereed a youth side for four years and I agreed to come out of retirement to do their home games for their final year at youth level. I turned up one Sunday morning, a sunny day, perfect for a good game of football. Unfortunately, the opposition turned up with only 10 players, they were near the bottom of the table and Cranleigh (dame, now you know the team) still had hopes of winning the league. This was going to be a walk in the park, and within the first 2 minutes they were 1 up. After 10 minutes, they couldn’t understand why they weren’t 5-0 up. Half time still 1-0 they weren’t happy, with 20 minutes to go 10 man Bagshot scored an equalizer. That was it, I suddenly became the worst referee that they’d ever had. Surely Steve Ferris must have refed them in the past, but the constant descent and appealing for any coming together cards should have come out but I trusted the players to go back to playing football rather than do my job for me as it was so out of character, something I am now regretting. Which brings me on to another problem as I sit here on the Monday after the game, I’m refereeing them again on Thursday!!! Now do I take that experience into the game and immediately brandish cards to the players who should have got them on the Sunday for the first sign of descent or clean slate, new start and referee like Sunday never happened??........ Well read on and I’ll tell you what I do/did. Thursday came, pencils sharpened, cards polished and vaselined for easier slide. Two in the book………. for the opposition and not a peck out of Cranleigh. I think someone had warned them.

Adrian’s Tip of the Week SINGLE men - Get a glimpse of married life by taping Woman's Hour on Radio 4, then playing it back at a

higher volume while watching the football on TV.

Page 4: GUILDFORD€¦ · forward. There [s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last

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14th September - Guest Speakers are Vince Penfold and Gareth Heighes 12th October - Guest Speaker is Charles Breakspear NO SHOW 9th November - Guest Speaker is Jason Connolly 14th December - Christmas Buffet 11th January - Guest Speaker TBA 8th February - Club/League Meeting 14th March – Law Changes for the 2016-17 Season 11th April - Guest Speaker is Michael Webb

9th May - AGM/Fish 'n' Chip Supper

RA Membership Number 1 GUI4984J Mr ADRIAN FREEMAN 16 GUI4988J Mr TRISTAN GREAVES 2 GUI25550K Mr ALEX TAYLOR ROSE 17 GUI4965J Mr COLIN HENDERSON 3 GUI29471N Mr ANDY WEBB 18 GUI5003J Mr JAMIE ROLLAND 4 GUI1982J Mr CLIVE TIDEY 19 GUI5002J Mr VIC ROLLAND 5 GUI4972J Mr DAVID EGERTON CARY 20 GUI5004J Mr BRIAN SLYFIELD 6 GUI29001N Mr ELLIOTT HEWARD 21 GUI5005J Mr JACOB SLYFIELD 7 GUI5010J Mr JOHN THORNTON 22 GUI4973J Mr GEOFF COMLEY 8 GUI22379J Mr NEVILLE SPARKES 23 GUI4966J Mr DAVID HUTCHINSON 9 GUI27893M Mr OSCAR LEAL 24 GUI29758N Mr CHRIS WILLIAMS 10 GUI23368J Mr RAY COTTON 25 GUI4983J Mr BRIAN FISH 11 GUI4978J Mr ROBERT DICK 26 GUI4990J Mr LEE HERMITAGE 12 GUI5013J Mr RUSSELL WORCESTER 13 GUI4989J Mr ROGER HALL 14 GUI4982J Mr STEVE FERRIS 15 GUI4994J Mr TONY IRELAND

GUILDFORD REFEREES' SOCIETY: Income & Expenditure for Season 2015-2016

Income 2015-16 Expenditure 2015-16

Subscriptions (26) 520.00 Referee's Association 364.00

GRS monthly Key Draw (2) 37.00 GRS monthly Key Draw 10.00

GRS Meeting Refund 20.00 SCFA Referee Association 32.00

Supplies (£140.50) 30.50 Supplies (Collections paid to CIW) 140.50

GRS Xmas Draw Income 76.00 GRS Xmas Draw Expenditure 70.00

Christmas Buffet 50.00

AGM Supper (2015) 51.70

Sub totals 683.50 718.20

Brought Fwd 2014-15 2,556.42 Deposit A/c 2,447.21

Inc over Expenditure -34.70 Bank a/c 74.51

2,521.72 2,521.72

RMD April 2016

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Can you name any of these players? Taken in 1952-3, it could be Shamley Green FC as the pub is The Red Lion in Shamley Green.

Back Row: Harold Stevens; Gerald Stevens?; Don Jones; Fred Derby; Len Tuffs; Bob Tuffs, Jack Elliott

Front Row: Freddie Punter; Michael Alett; Morris Reckson; ……..?......; Tommy Kelsey; Jim Cook

I found these two photos in the Surrey County Intermediate League (Western) paper work and no-one has a clue what the teams are.

Page 6: GUILDFORD€¦ · forward. There [s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last

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1965 Wesley Puttock I believe is far Left

Page 7: GUILDFORD€¦ · forward. There [s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last

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The “W Club”. A brief tour of football in Woking. There was a select group of City gentlemen back in the 1980’s known as the “W Club” who frequented the train out of Waterloo every evening, and the story goes that they had a whisky for every station they passed through associated with the letter W. Wimbledon, Walton-on-Thames, West Byfleet, Worplesdon, and of course Woking. The elite group of gentlemen in the above photograph have nothing whatsoever to do with the “W Club”, but I thought it might be a good way of getting your attention to read on. Although I was, thankfully, not a member of the Club, I used to stand in that smoke filled buffet car and gaze out of the window at all football pitches that flashed past wondering ,“who plays there?”. I would never have known then that 35 years later I would be visiting many of those grounds as a player, a referee and as a Surrey County Football Association Officer. Our local football teams strive to associate themselves with the “W” of the Woking Borough. Woking & Maybury, Woking & Weybridge Woking & Horsell, Woking Cougars, Woking Corinthians, Woking Town, Woking Tigers, Woking United and last, but not least, Woking Football Club. The list doesn’t end there, with the suburbs of the Borough keeping their identity with the local communities of Knaphill, Byfleet, Mayford, West Byfleet, Pirbright, Ripley, Worplesdon, Westfield and Sheerwater. Much of the above is the grassroots part of the game, but the biggest issue we have is how to sustain the participation in the Adult game. Whilst the Youth side continues to thrive, the challenge facing us is the transition from Youth to Adult football. Once the footballing kids reach 17 or 18 years of age, the social distractions start to intervene, not to mention going off to further their education at University and working at weekends. The two largest local Youth Leagues, the Surrey Primary and Surrey Youth Leagues, have over 1,350 Youth teams between them. So how do we keep them in the game once adult football beckons? That is the challenge. So what are we doing about it? To address the challenge of keeping our boys and girls in football, the Surrey County FA is holding an evening devoted to the subject on 17th May, at the Metropolitan Police Football Club’s home venue of Imber Court, with the event being delivered by the Football Association Adult Participation Manager, Dermot Collins. All Leagues have been invited, but any Clubs will be welcome too. It was very pleasing to see the set up at Meadow Sports Boys & Girls Football Club a couple of weeks ago, when they kindly hosted one of our Youth County Cup Finals at short notice. The Club, celebrating their 50th anniversary next season, have 28 Youth and Girls Teams, providing football facilities for all ages at their Loop Road home. The delivery of football at Meadow Sports and at many other Youth Clubs like them, is due to the army of volunteers who devote their time to give something back to football. It is fitting that their Loop Road ground has the back drop of Woking Football Club’s Laithwaite Community Stadium, where next Wednesday evening, the 4th May, we will see the Surrey Senior Cup Final being hosted between Godalming Town and Merstham. 7.45pm kick off. With another season drawing to a close, and with Cup Finals of the local Leagues being held all over the County, bookshelves and mantelpieces of players and match officials will soon be graced with a medal or two. Next instalment: a brief tour of football in Guildford.

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www.guardian.co.uk/football/you-are-the-ref

Thanks to “Touchlines” Sutton Referees’ Society for all the “You Are The Ref” questions

With snow obscuring some of the pitch markings, the home keeper uses half-time to mark out a line with red chalk from his goalline to the penalty spot. He says it’s the only way he can judge angles – otherwise you should abandon. What now?

……………………………………………………………………….. When the home team go 6-0 up near the end of a cup semi-final, the scorer takes his shirt off and stands right in front of you, celebrating. You realise what he is up to: he wants to be booked now as it will trigger a suspension for his next league game, removing any risk of his being suspended for the final. What do you do?

……………………………………………………………………….. A striker celebrates a stunning goal by making the sign of the cross and praying. The beaten keeper is outraged, insisting the striker has breached UEFA rules on religious messages. What do you do?

……………………………………………………………………….. One of your assistants has churned up his part of the wet pitch so much that he takes to running inside the line when the ball is not nearby. Defenders complain that he is causing a distraction and a danger. Do you intervene?

………………………………………………………………………… You are the assistant referee on a local league semi-final. With 10 minutes left to play and several tired players on the pitch, some of the tackling has become a little ragged. In the center of the park, midway inside your half, a nippy red midfielder pinches the ball from a less-agile opponent and spins away to start another attack. In desperation, the blue opponent lunges into a reckless challenge, with both feet leaving the ground, but makes no contact as the red player darts away. The referee is about 8 yards from the incident and looking right at it but makes no reaction, simply allowing play to continue. Behind you, the red manager makes an angry shout that it should be a red card. In your mind, a yellow card was certainly deserved. What do you do?

……………………………………………………………………… While you try to control a wild touchline melee, the away side sneakily swap a defender for a striker from their bench. You only realise when the striker scores the winner moments later. What now?

Keith Hackett says: “A nightmare! You and your colleagues should never have allowed this to happen, but as it has, here’s how to unravel it. First, disallow the goal. Second, caution the striker for coming on without permission, and send him back to the bench. Third, caution the player who went off without permission, and have him return to the pitch. And fourth, approach the manager. Tell him you will be reporting his conduct – he can expect severe sanctions – and ask if he now wants to make a lawful substitution. Restart with a goal-kick.”

……………………………………………………………………………………….. Late in the second half, you ask a player with blood on his shirt to leave the pitch and change it. As play continues, he grabs a new shirt and races back on but, in his haste, has put it on inside-out, obscuring his name and number. Do you stop play?

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Keith Hackett says: “Yes, but not because the shirt is the wrong way round. He went off under

Law 4 (concerning players’ equipment), so cannot return until the ball is out of play and you have checked the condition of the new shirt. You need to deal with this by stopping the game, showing him a yellow card for coming back on without your permission, and then having him change again so his shirt number is visible. Restart with an indirect free-kick to the opposition, taken from the point where the ball was when you stopped the game.”

………………………………………………………………………………………. On a bitterly cold day, a striker wears two official shirts at once – his original and an identical replacement - but in the second half he overheats, so throws one to a young fan during a stoppage. He’s already on a yellow! What do you do?

Keith Hackett says: “Nothing. The laws state that a player who removes his shirt “after scoring a goal” is cautioned for unsporting behaviour. There’s no reason to penalise this player: he can wear two identical layers if he’s cold, and he can take one off if that changes. If he left the field without permission to hand this shirt to a fan then that could pose a booking risk – but use some common sense. Get on with the game.”

EURO 2016 GROUP FIXTURES

GROUP B

Saturday, June 11: Wales v Slovakia (17:00, Stade de Bordeaux)

Saturday, June 11: England v Russia (20:00, Stade Velodrome, Marseille)

Wednesday, June 15: Russia v Slovakia (14:00, Stade Pierre Mauroy, Lille)

Thursday, June 16: England v Wales (14:00, Stade Bollaert-Delelis, Lens)

Monday, June 20: Russia v Wales (20:00, Stadium de Toulouse)

Monday, June 20: Slovakia v England (20:00, Stade Geoffroy Guichard, St Etienne)

GROUP C

Sunday, June 12: Poland v Northern Ireland (17:00, Stade de Nice)

Sunday, June 12: Germany v Ukraine (20:00, Stade Pierre Mauroy, Lille)

Thursday, June 16: Ukraine v Northern Ireland (17:00, Stade de Lyon)

Thursday, June 16: Germany v Poland (20:00, Stade de France, Paris)

Tuesday, June 21: Ukraine v Poland (17:00, Stade Velodrome, Marseille)

Tuesday, June 21: Northern Ireland v Germany (17:00, Parc des Princes, Paris)

GROUP E

Monday, June 13: Republic of Ireland v Sweden (17:00, Stade de France, Paris)

Monday, June 13: Belgium v Italy (20:00, Stade de Lyon)

Friday, June 17: Italy v Sweden (14:00, Stadium de Toulouse)

Saturday, June 18: Belgium v Republic of Ireland (14:00, Stade de Bordeaux)

Wednesday, June 22: Italy v Republic of Ireland (20:00, Stade Pierre Mauroy, Lille)

Wednesday, June 22: Sweden v Belgium (20:00, Stade de Nice)

Page 10: GUILDFORD€¦ · forward. There [s nothing like being in control. The end of another season is upon us, Cup Finals, League titles and relegation deciders nearly complete. My last

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MAD MONDAY

WHILE STOCKS LAST! Please make Bob your first port of call for all of your equipment.

Whistles Watches

Cards Match day Pads

Flags Socks Shirts Shorts

Please refrain from smoking in the meeting room.

Ensure mobile phones are switched off or switched to silent

Take your glasses back to the bar at the end of the evening.

Make sure you have signed the attendance book.

Note the date of the next meeting—we look forward to seeing you then and have a safe journey home.

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THE GUILDFORD Referee Is the monthly magazine of Guildford Referees’ Society

Its aim is to give members notice of meetings, report on Society activities and act as a forum for members’ views, comments and opinions. The views expressed herein are not necessarily the view of the Football Association, FAMOA, The Society nor of it’s Committee Contributions (on any subject likely to be of interest to members) are invited, and should be sent directly to the Editor at least 16 days before the date of the next meeting. Guildford Referees Society meets on the second Monday of each month, August to May, at Godalming Town FC, Weycourt, Godalming. Kick off 7:45pm The Society is part of the SURREY REFEREES ASSOCIATION whose objectives are: To improve the status of Referees To improve the standards of Refereeing To promote a closer relationship between Referees and Football Associations and kindred bodies. To assist all such Associations in promoting the best interest of the game. To assist all such Associations in promoting their educational and general work. To establish Referee’s Societies of Associations in districts where none exist. To watch over and promote the Referees in general. To protect the members from injustice or unfair treatment. To assist or take action (legal of otherwise) for and on behalf of any member unfairly or unjustly treated. To make such representation to the governing bodies as may be thought necessary for the good of the

game and the benefit of Referees and Refereeing. To maintain a Benevolent Fund to aid members or past members or their dependents in case of need. To assist in maintaining a steady supply of suitable candidates to take the Referees’ examination. To provide social activities, as desirable, and to retain in membership those who have given up active Refereeing, that their experience may benefit the newcomer.