Sunday 7 July 2013

Finals and Closing Ceremonies

While the ultimate goal for any tournament for both teams and referees is to reach the finals, just because you do not make it does not make the tournament a disappointment or anything less than what it would be otherwise. I have had the chance to meet numerous teams during the week in addition to all the referees, and the vast majority were not on the field during the finals, but almost all were in the stands cheering voraciously. The presentations on Friday night by Bobby Madley and Peter Frodjfelt was a great way to end the week, but the closing ceremonies and final matches were a great way to end the tournament. The 80 odd referees who did not get assigned to any finals took full advantage of the free morning and all decided to go out that night. It turned into 30 some referees at 5:00am wandering the streets of Estoril, but we had a good time and it was great to spend a last bit of time with the referees who I have come to know so well. 

Finals day itself was a scorching 41 degrees, and while the finals were scheduled to end at 1:30, a kerfuffle with the busses had them finishing at 5, right in the heat of the day. The opening match of the day was the Under 17 girls final. It presented Athletico Madrid against a Portuguese squad, refereed by the Swedish girls with Linda Lindskog in the middle. Athletico Madrid set out to prove their dominance and demonstrate what a strong team they were. They ended up winning 5-1, and Pongyi (Hungarian Referee) and I celebrated the win with them, taking pictures with the trophy and getting his Athletico Madrid flag signed. We also did the same with the American Under 17 girls from Wisconsin, but it did not go nearly as well when they realized that Pongyi was in fact the referee that had ejected their coach from a match earlier in the tournament. While the girls didn't care, the coach didn't seem to like Pongyi blowing kisses to him while chatting to his team.

The next match was the Under 15 match between two Spanish sides. To get to the finals, these teams had beaten giants such as Athletico Madrid, Sporting Lisbon, Southampton, Zenit, and multiple other professional teams. The referee team was a Canadian group, which was great to see our local referees do so well. It was headed by Maxime Belileu from Quebec, lined by Nova Scotian brothers Travis and Chad Levebre, and also features Lucas Pamatat from Ontario. The match was very good, but had the most puzzling sequence of events I have ever seen. The orange team possessed the ball at about midfield and unbeknownst to them, a blue player was hurt around midfield. A couple passes later, they had put the ball in the back of the net, and the blue coach was outraged. Etiquette would say that when there's an injury you put the ball out, but there is nothing wrong with not doing so, and the lawbook says play on. After the restart, the Orange team must have been feeling a bit sheepish as they allowed the blue striker to walk uncontested to the goal and put it in, effectively erasing the deficit. I have never before seen something like this, and all of the referees were puzzled. The best part about this sporting behavior, is that the team allowing the own goal, then lost the match by one goal. 

Under 13s featured powerhouses Sporting Lisbon against Athletico Madrid, and what a good fixture it was. The match was done by referee Jeremy Lensink from Holland, nicknamed 007 for the fact that the last thing he did before leaving the dressing room was comb his hair and put hair gel in it. He commanded an excellent game with the help of his Dutch team, and the final was 2-2, leading to penalties which Athletic Madrid won in the 6th round of shots. 

Finally, the showcase match, the Under 16 final pitched professional team Chivas Guadalajara from Mexico against Amunike FC from Nigeria. The game was fast paced and was refereed by some of the best in the tournament , headed my Matt Mcdermid from Scotland. The game was in front of around 2500 people and was broadcast on national TV. After the game, I had a chance to do some referee badge, pin, and coin swapping with the other foreign referees. The last day was a great time, with cheerleaders, awards, and music, the atmosphere was phenomenal. Finally it was time to say good bye and swap contact information with the people that I have become so close with over the last few weeks. 


I have now checked into my hotel where I will spend a couple last days in Lisbon before returning home. It was so refreshing to have a hot bath after only cold showers for 2 weeks, and to sleep in a room without a symphony of alarms in the morning, and rest my head on a pillow, not a pile of clothes. I slept 13 hours the first night after averaging about 5 hours a night during the week. It was without a doubt worth it, and I would do it again in a heartbeat (I will). I will at some point while I am here write up a post examining the difference between football here and soccer back home. I will also write a post reviewing my experience with tournaments abroad, and assisting my readers in creating experiences like this, while providing feedback for the organization. 


What an experience

Kevin

Friday 5 July 2013

Day 5, an evening with Peter Frodjfelt and Bobby Madley

It pains me to think that the tournament is coming to a close, but this week has sure been a ride! Today was the final day of matches, save for 5 final fixtures tomorrow, and the quality of the soccer has begun to peak. My assigned matches for the day were two Assistant Referee spots, first for the U15 playoff B (consolation) quarter finals, and next for the U17 Girls Playoff A quarter finals. Both games were good, and I had a great time. The first match was between the Chicago team I refereed yesterday and a team from Wisconsin. The match was 2-1 for Wisconsin, and it felt as if I was back home: English vs. English, North American style of play, spectators who know nothing about the beautiful game, and kids who just want to play. Easy game for the Finnish referee, no cards, no crucial decisions, once again a nice match.

The next match was U17 girls, Wisconsin (USA) against Real Betis, a professional club from Spain. Betis spoke no English, so once again I was translating on the touch line. Great match, and while USA was outmatched, they took the lead early on a bad blunder by the Betis keeper. It had a wonderful atmosphere, and the 37 degree heat wasn't slowing anybody down. There were a few bad injuries in the second half, which allowed us to grab some water which was much needed. Linda was the Swedish referee, David was on the line with me, and Bruno (one of my mates from Madrid) was the fourth. Bruno had a grand time joking to the American girls that they were only allowed to sub after a kiss. It didn't work once, much to his chagrin. Real Betis pushed hard in the second half and ended up scoring three straight to earn a spot in the Semi finals. 

One of the matches I highlighted in my schedule was the U16 semifinal fixtures, and could not have asked for a better game. The match I went to watch was a repeat of last years finals between Zambia's Nike sponsored Lukasa FC against the professional squad Chivas Guadalajara in Mexico. Many of both teams players have already played with there club's first team. The match was killer! Zambia was pushing hard but could not hit the back of the net. The game looked bound to end 0-0 when 10 minutes from the final whistle, Zambia got caught in the offside trap which sprung a Chivas player who drove deep only to get it across to the other striker who simply tapped it in for the lead. In stoppage time, while Zambia pushed everyone high, Chivas put home a second on the counter-attack, thus cementing their spot in the most important game of the week against a Nigerian squad in the final.

Our week was highlighted by a meeting and presentation with Peter Frodjfelt, FIFA referee who refereed the European championships in 2008, including being fourth official in the final. His presentation was great, and after meeting him initially at lunch, I began to appreciate what a stellar person he is, and gaining great appreciation for the road to the top. He was honest humorous and approachable, and he gave a great talk for the eager audience. We also got to hear from Bobby Madley, who was just appointed to the Premiership and is part of their select (professional) group. He first spoke about using advantage and taught a class on when and where to consider advantage, but where his speech really excelled was when he moved on to motivating and inspiring the referees in the room. He has reached the Premiership at just 29 years old, whereas Peter began refereeing at 27, proving that as a 17 year old referee, the opportunities are endless. One of the things that they both stressed is the importance of setting up a road map of your goals and breaking it into smaller goals. 

We concluded the presentations with the awarding of finals and the referee awards. Unfortunately, I came away empty handed in both aspects, but I have learned and developed so much this week that  I am not bothered the least. When there are 140 refs going after 30 final spots, the majority will not get any, and the quality of refereeing here is so elite, its a real toss up as to who gets it. My assessments have been great for the games I have been given, but with the number of referees, I needed to have more difficult games, allowing me to score higher on the gradient. That is simply the luck of the draw, and at high profile tournaments, everyone dreams of reffing a final, but very few do. This is something I can set my sights on down the road, and strive to better myself to the point where I will get one. I must not forget too that I was appointed to two finals in Madrid when many refs received none, so I have had my fair share of finals these two weeks. 

I will give match recaps of the finals, and also conclude the tournament in the coming days when I have some more time, but in the meantime, I will say that there was a string of very interesting events in some finals. 

Kev

Thursday 4 July 2013

Quarterfinals, match day 4

The first three days of play no longer mean anything, and it all comes down to the next three fixtures to determine success or failure on the part of the teams at the Iber Cup. My day began once again at 6:00am, in order to catch the early bus to the fields. I have been getting such little sleep that I have been sleeping whenever I get the chance, yesterday, I even took an hour nap in the referee changing room during my game off. I was off for the first game, but after a snooze on the bus, I woke feeling refreshed, so I watched the first game with the assessor, discussing some focal points of the match in front of us. The fixture we were watching was Russian professional squad FC zenit against a Spanish side. While FC zenit seemed to be the better team, they fell 1-0 in the first half due to a penalty. The game became very physical and the Dutch referee did a great job at keeping control. Zenit levelled the score in the second last minute, and the match went to penalties. As if that was not close enough, after 5 penalties, both teams had scored 4, so it went to sudden death. After 7 kicks from the mark, The Russian giant was slayed, and had been eliminated from the tournament. 
Photo from the week prior, seeing Madrid with Paul Noble, Sarah Grundy, and Tom Beeton, all British referees. 

Before my match, I had to referee kicks from the penalty mark between two teams who were equal in all other tie-breakers. They had the same points, head to head, and goal difference, so penalty kicks were the only way to solve it. The loser would then play the American team in my game following. Even though two of their misses were redone as my assistant flagged for the keeper coming off his line, ultimately, Kenkre FC of India lost to a Portuguese squad. This then set up my match between Kenkre FC of India and Sokkers FC of Chicago, USA. 

In the knockout match, both teams wanted it badly, but it was clear from the get-go that it was a one-sided fixture. USA stormed to a 3-0 lead early, and the first half was relatively quiet, other than a third minute caution for a reckless Indian challenge. The second half, USA held possession for around 80% of the game, and were content to just move the ball around nicely. The game ended 4-0, and this was by far my easiest match of both tournaments. I was assessed on it, and I got the top mark possible for this game of an 8.3. As a refresher, the best mark is an 8.5, but the game must be considered very difficult. an 8.4 can be awarded to a difficult game (this is what the referee before me got), and an 8.3 is the top mark for a normal difficulty game. I would like to think that games are kept at a normal level by proactive refereeing and good man management, so I am always happy to have games fall in that category. While I love a war, now and then it is nice to have an easy fixture. My average for the tournament for marks is 8.3, and I received one 8.1 the week prior, so hopefully this is a high enough average to get me some Semi-finals and consolation finals tomorrow, and maybe even a final on Saturday (fingers crossed).

Does it get any more international then USA vs. India, refereed by a Canadian, a Dutchman, and 2 Gibraltarans?

Kevin

Tuesday 2 July 2013

Match day 2 and match day 3

Four games assigned for Tuesday July 2 aka match day 2. Began very nicely with a nice fourth official at 9:00am, which meant a 6:10 am wake up call, and since the Germans were saying they don't get country music, I decided that Cruise would be my alarm song. Needless to day I may have pissed a few off, but its worth it right?

 The first match was as fourth official for Portugal vs. England U13, and it kept me busy as we had a fair number of incidents and control was not maintained by the man in the middle. A few cards could have been issued earlier, but all in all, we made it through ok. The real issue arose when the Portuguese team refused to shake hands with the English team, and then the english player claimed that the Portuguese player called him a N****r, so the English lad took a run at him. I was right in the thick of it, and also had to deal with the two coaches going at each other. Amazing what happens if the game is allowed to deteriorate, and the importance of man management. Portuguese squad won 2-1. 

Next, I was in the middle for NK Hypo-limac of Croatia vs. GD Fabril of Portugal, (U13) and it was a great match, and easy match, and I was pleased with my assessment. I received an 8.3 on a scale from 7.5-8.5 with an 8.0 average grade. You can only receive an 8.4 if the match is considered difficult, or an 8.5 if it is considered very difficult, so for a normal game, I received the top possible mark. The match ended 2-1 for Portugal, and was a great tie all-round. 

I ended the day with 2 ARs, first for professional team Real Deportivo (esp) against a portuguese squad, with Deportivo winning 2-0. It was a nice team of referees as we had two Quebecers, me, and a Frenchman, so we called the game entirely in French. Next we had Pro squad Athletico Madrid vs. a Portuguese team. Athletico were phenomenal, best team of that age (U15) I have ever seen, and they won 6-0, they also gave us official pins, which was a cool memento of the pro squad. In the afternoon, we had our first fitness session with Joao Capella's referee coach, who taught us the mechanics of warmups and cool downs. We were scheduled to have a training session with him today, but this was cancelled. The organizational aspect of both these two tournaments has been a struggle, but ulitmately, the soccer is fantastic and the trip is provided which is what really matters. I will give feedback on Tournaments Abroad and review the experience provided by their tournaments after they are done, as this could be an opportunity for other referees in Canada and the USA and wherever else in the world. 

Last night we heard about one of our fellow refs from Holland who had a mass confronation at the conclusion of his match, and was actually struck by a player. What I have been told is all word of mouth, so it may not be entirely accurate. So in the under 17 girls match (yes, it was a girls game), a Swedish squad was playing against a Portuguese group and ended tied 2-2. Apparently the girls said something to the technical area of the other team, then the Portuguese parents, coaches and players attacked the Swedish girls. The ref told me that he even saw a male parent lift a girl player in a stranglehold, craziness. The ref was hit by a player with the back of her hand when he tried to step in and prevent further altercations. The worst part is that the team was not expelled from the tournament, mearly asked for a written apology, I don't know about the parents and any assault charges, although I heard that the cops refuse to get involved. Tournaments Abroad will no longer provide refs for games involving those two teams, so we'll see what happens on that front. 

According to Joao Capela, Fifa referee based out of Portugal, the economical situation has hit Portugal particulairly hard, and they are using soccer as a release. The people will sooner lose their car or house than they would their seasons tickets, so when Joao had a controversial cup final between Benfica and Sporting Lisbon, he received death threats and had to change his phone number and get security. Here, Soccer is taken more seriously than any sport in North America, it truly is a religion. Day 3 had several parent confrontations and spectator and player brawls, and the combination of the 35 degree heat and the final group stage matches led to a very tense day's games. 


I had a light day due to my 4 game day yesterday, so I just had two ARs, first I was on the line for a Scottish lad in a 3-0 defeat of a USA team to a Portuguese team, and then this was followed by another easy AR to Lucas, the Canadian from Ontario's 6-0 landslide win of a Portuguese side over a German one. Right now, I have done 8 games at this tournament comprised of 1 middle, 2 fourth officials, and 5 ARs, which is a low number of middles, but I hope that this will change in the coming playoff games. I had a grilled octopus for lunch today which was quite unique and surprisingly tasty, and had a nice nap on the beach in the afternoon. Tomorrow I have another early start, first orchestrating penalties to decide the winner of two teams level on points, goal difference, and head to head. I will then be the middle referee for the loser of the penalty kicks against a team from Chicago in a knockout fixture. So far, the American team has struggled as the American style matches up difficultly against the European one, but I expect it will be a hotly contested match as both teams will seek to take something out of the tournament.

I will update on how it goes, for now, I cannot sleep due to the French team of 11 year olds running wild in the room over, and the Eastern European referees singing their soccer chants full volume below us. 

Kev

Lisbon and Iber Cup match day 1 and opening cermonies

With over 8000 participants and 36 countries, the Iber Cup is truly something special. Lisbon is a fantastic backdrop for the tournament, with fields all the way up the coast comprised of lush grass fields and classy turf pitches. The opening ceremonies yesterday were top notch, and the opening matches have been very good. I arrived in Lisbon along with our English and German counterparts Saturday night, and since Sunday was to be our only day without matches, we were intent on making full use of it... to recover from the night before. We took the train into Lisbon and went around the Bario Alto, Lisbon's historical district, before making our way to the top night club in Portugal. Lux was quite a good time, and was very classy, it was three floors ending with a rooftop terrace, and quite nice. I managed to get us very lost on our way back, but we did ultimately manage to make it back before sunrise (barely). 

Sunday was a lot of sleeping, but we did manage to make it down to the beach, which is a short 30 minute walk from the school we are sleeping at. It was an incredibly nice beech, and at least half of Lisbon seemed to agree with me, as it was packed! I finished reading Graham Poll's Seeing Red while sitting up at the terrace bar in the heat looking over the Ocean, really nice and relaxing after a hectic week of reffing. Come monday, it was time to start to do some work, and we received our first day assignments. I was lucky to get two afternoon games, and very easy ones at that, so I made my way into Benem, a suburb of Portugal filled with monuments and museums. I had a great time walking the streets and seeing some of the sites before heading off to referee my first ties. Sunday night we also got to watch the Confederations Cup final between Brazil and Spain at an outdoor viewing patio with a bunch of rowdy Spanish fans. Very cool to see it there, but I was less than thrilled with the result. 

My first match was a fourth official between Southampton Fc and AD Barroselas from Portugal. I was officiating with Lucas, a fellow Canadian from Toronto, and two Dutch lads. The match was alright, the pace much lower than I expected and was used to from last week, and in the end Portugal had the share of bounces as they won 2-0. I was then on the line for Kenkre Fc all the way from India in their fixture with another Portuguese squad. The Indians were dominated and lost in a route of 4 or 5 to nothing. These were both routine games, and I reckon the assessments should be positive of our performances. 

That night was the opening ceremonies, which was truly quite an impressive affair. Each team represented their country with a few players walking the parade in front of 5000 packed stands. the 13 Canadian referees determined we would have one from each province represented, so I went for Alberta, Maxime went for Quebec, Chad went for Nova Scotia, and Lucas from Ontario. It was quite something to enter carrying the Canadian flag to cheering in front of 5000 people on Canada day. Not a bad way to celebrate our great country all the way on the other side of the world. It was great to see the diversity and different cultures and attitudes, and to compare the team from Mississauga to the Nike sponsored Zambian team. Everyone was there to have a good time, and we took lots of pictures with various squads and just had some fun. It truly is a lovely atmosphere, and while everyone is highly competitive on the pitch, they all want the best off the pitch. 


The school we are staying in is like a school trip, there are 15 of us on air matresses on the floor of a classroom, but it is fun because we are all there to have a good time. In my room, I am between the Germans and the French, and the English are off to the side. The Germans keep getting upset because they say the French snore, and I worry that in an invasion I would get caught in the middle and Britain would get dragged in. In all seriousness, its great to see everybody from everywhere get on so great, and as you can see, we are all very patriotic. 



The environment at the tournament is phenomenal, much more positive than Madrid, and you feel like everyone is there to compete, but to have a good time. The school that we are staying at is cramped and uncomfortable, but ultimately, it is about the experience. With so many different nationalities at the school we have taken to decorating our rooms, and I have been sure to put a little Canada in our room. As for the Elite Group, unfortunately Mr. Joao Capella, the fifa referee in charge of it got a Fifa assignment in IReland on Thursday, however he is still trying to run a classroom session or two. We will also have fitness sessions and will create personalized warm-ups and cooldowns. The mood here is great, and I cannot adequately convey how neat it is to work with Slovakian and Dutch referees during a game between Croatia and Norway. 

Bem-vindo ao Portugal, 

Kevin  

Saturday 29 June 2013

6 days later, the conclusion of the Madrid Sur Cup

6 Referee appointments, 9 Assistant Referee appointments, and 2 fourth official appointments later, we have reached the end of the Madrid Sur Cup, and oh boy, what a journey. I have officiated matches at levels ranging from U13 to U19, and have had games pass without a single caution and games where I have send offs. I got to experience such a different style of play and different attitude towards the sport, while meeting some fantastic young men and women from around Europe. In a few hours time, I will be in Lisbon beginning the next phase of my refereeing experience with the Iber Cup, an even more skilled, more international, larger, more prestigious tournament than this past one. I reckon we are up for the challenge as referees and will seize the chance to shine on an even bigger stage. 

Half-time selfie from earlier this week

Today was finals day at Madrid Sur Cup, the most important day of the tournament, and all eyes were on the fixtures today. I was put in charge of the first match of the day: an under 13 boys final. I had the privilege of refereeing with a truly world class team, and they performed phenomenally. On the line, I had Sarah Grundy (eng) and Ryan Corno(eng), while Matthias Raeymaekers (Belgium) was my fourth official. I began the game quite nervous actually, it was intimidating to be refereeing a cup final with so much on the line. The game was quite harmless to begin with and I tried to play a minimal role. around the 20th minute, a striker went down just atop the penalty area after a very benign challenge by a defender. While there was slight contact, the striker (in true Southern European fashion) flung himself to the ground. There was enough contact that I was unable to punish the striker for simulation, but it was clearly not a penalty, and both assistant and fourth official agreed, the supporters and team however did not. The game began to escalate, but I was able to bring it back under wraps, and ended the half with one caution to a player for a reckless challenge, and the score was 2-0. The second half began very physically, as the losing team tried to level the tides, and I ended up issuing two more cautions throughout the course of play to each team respectively for unsporting behaviour. With about 10 minutes to go, the losing team got one to bring it to a 2-1 score, and it became very tense. Shortly after this, one of the winning team's managers after Matthias had warned the bench to tone down their outbursts, let fly with a particularly direct and confrontational string of actions and words. When Mathias came over to quiet him, he brushed him off to continue his verbal onslaught, waving his arms around in both of our faces, it was an easy decision to eject him from the match. He left pretty quickly after, and I expect he knew before partaking in this outburst that he would be ejected. The final score was 2-1, but not before I cautioned a winning player for delaying the restart, and then cautioned a losing player for dissent. 

The one thing about the Spanish that I have learned this tournament is that they are incredibly sore losers, and will argue anything if you try and talk to them, thus our strategy during matches has evolved to pretending we do not speak a word of Spanish, and avoiding conversation all together. While this prevents you from man managing like I do in Canada, it allows us to avoid the protests and dissent. This is similar to how referees deal in the World Cup as opposed to local fixtures from their home country. 

The other final I was involved in was the Under 17 boys final as a fourth official. I was part of a team comprised of Craig Simpson (eng), George Warren (eng), and Ben Judd(eng). Contrary to what I just wrote above, as fourth official, I need to utilize my Spanish and use it to cool and control the benches. For those of you who do not know, the fourth official's responsibilities and duties are to control the benches, manage subs, communicate added time, to fill for any injured referee, and to assist with the game management. Normally, fourth appointments are quite routine and are mostly sitting keeping stats, but today I was quite involved. Craig called a great game, and his style was very similar to mine, letting the game flow and only intervening when necessary while still keeping control. He managed the game extremely well, and had issued a couple of cautions in a 0-0 game at half time. Early in the second half, after going down 1-0, a player who was already on a caution was beat, and then lashed out with a very reckless, borderline excessive force kick at another player, Craig gave him his second caution and sent him to the stands, which then lead the player (a good foot taller than Craig) to come right up against him in a threatening manner. I believe that the player would have struck Craig had one of the offender's team mates not stepped in (thank god). The offender than went at the other team which created a mass confrontation situation. Unlike hockey referees, we are not instructed to actively involve ourselves, rather the ref and ARs enter the pitch and triangulate the incident, keeping players out and recording information of who to discipline. As the fourth official it is my duty to keep coaches and substitutes from entering the pitch. I had both team's coaches and one team's subs try and enter the pitch, so I quickly stopped the subs before they entered. While I was dealing with the one teams coaches, I saw the other teams coach half way to the brawl, I rushed over and settled him down and dealt with the incident. Craig had a great rest of the game, and all three referees were top notch  and kept anything else from occurring, the game ended 1-0. 

The top group of referees in the tournament are given the U19 final appointments, and it was a great match with which the referee team did phenomenal. 20 year old German national  Patrik Feyer was in the middle, while British assistants Mike Ryan and Sam Anderson were on the line for him. The game was a great game, and ended up with a 3-1 final, with the losing team only having 9 men on the pitch after having one sent off for his second yellow for chasing Sam down the line with dissent, and losing one to injury with no remaining substitutions. Great game and its been great befriending these fantastic referees who are all joining me in Lisbon. 

I can say with absolute certainty that the Madrid Sur Cup referees are absolute class, even Bongyi, the Hungarian who eagerly accompanies his breakfast with a beer and a smoke (he would always sober up before matches). Its been a fantastic time here, and I look forward to new pitches and players in Lisbon, and wish all the best to everyone I have met here. 

Thanks for reading everyone! 

Kevin

Friday 28 June 2013

Playoffs, days 4 and 5 of the Madrid Sur Cup

We have now settled into our routine and I have begun to appreciate the variety of personalities we have aboard with us here. The number of different cultures present is still nothing compared to what it will be at Iber Cup, but none the less, it is an interesting dynamic among referees here. The styles on the field are also very unique and different between referees. At the Madrid Sur Cup, we have 4 Croatian referees, while they are an intimidating bunch at first impression; they are in reality quite humorous and they love to sing their Croatian chants on the bus. Yesterday, while being an Assistant referee, one of the Croatians, Tomislav expelled a manager from the sidelines without ever using the referee. While this is pretty unorthodox, I am impressed. Apparently in his broken English, he said to the coach, "sit down, next time you out." Next time came around and the coach decided to whine some more, so Tomas said from the line,"Ok, now you go" and gestured to the stands. Here's a picture below of Tomas in his "tourista" get up which he shows up to games in. 

Wouldn't want to cross an Eastern European dressed like that. 

Match day 4 signifies the start of playoff fixtures, and my assignments came down from the top for 3 U15 boys round of 16 matches (AR/REF/AR). I was quite pleased with my team for a couple of reasons. First off, while I love the international experience, being able to speak in English with all 4 officials makes it so much easier. Secondly, the fellows I was reffing with have become some of my best mates (their British must be wearing off on me). The choice in team was reflected on the field, and I reckon the communication and team work between officials was phenomenal and led to well called games. With clear pre game instructions on all games, we were able to get through quite well including getting a non-call in the penalty area spot on. Since this was knockout fixtures, it was quite heated, as the losing team's tournament dreams were over. At the end of Scott's routine game (I was AR1) the players had seen Dan's (AR2) wrist watch read 2 minutes less than full time. This is because this particular referee watch reaches the prescribed time and then begins to count down to mark stoppage time. This led to a mass confrontation between the players and referees which was handled phenomenally. I believe Scott gave 4 cautions at the end of the match in this incident but sent them on their way, very calmly handled, and the three referees did well at remaining calm and sending the players on their way incident free. My middle referee went quite well, and it helped to have strong assistants, very routine, and I am getting used to this high speed, high control style of play, just in time for Lisbon. 


My team for day 4 was me, Scott Robertson (eng), Dan Patterson (eng) and not pictured, Matt Sell (eng). Took some convincing to get Scott to hold up the Canadian flag

Day 5 presents the quarterfinals and semifinals, and I received an assignment of a middle for the Under  19 quarter finals. Right away, in the tunnel, I could tell I was handed a lit match, and it was over a can of gasoline. It was up to me whether I extinguished it or I let it burn into an explosion. The two teams were from the same club, but it was apparent the animosity between the two of them, I was in for a treat... My team was me, Jack Hennessey (eng), Sergio Bannahas (Esp), and Raul Alonso (esp). The match was intense right from the get go, wraught with dissent, fouls, malcontent, and complaining, my arm was twisted into calling an aggressive game to try and keep control. I had to issue several cautions early on, and this would prove monumental later in the game. The game was 1-1 near the 55th minute, when I witnessed two players go at it in the corner, when the ball was played clear, I saw the frustrated defender throw  the other player down in a reckless manner. I issued a second caution and produced a red card, now this is where it gets interesting. I had the captain of the team opposite the player sent off plead his case and ask me to recall the card, and allow the player to play. I thought this was odd, but as a referee I knew I had made the correct call, so I told the captain to be on his way and continued play. I later realised this was because they were both from the same club and wanted to have whichever team made it to the semi finals play full strength. The game deteriorated and i did what I could to retain control of the match. It was slow and ugly, and the Spanish are very sore winners and losers. In the end, it went to sudden death PKs, and after the 7th shot, the team at full stregnth had won. 

Hindsight is always 20/20, and looking back, there are a few things I would have done differently. First off, I am too used to our nice Canadians, and am fine with chatting with players, as I can manage them fine in English. With the Spanish, if you talk to them, they take that as an invitation to argue. Next, I reckon I ought to have cracked down earlier and prevented anything from escalating, but ultimately, after speaking with my assistants, they agree that the match was set to burn as soon as it began. I was really excited to get the quarter final assignment as its a high level match, but that is not near as excited to get my appointments for tomorrow. All we can do with the challenging matches is learn from them, and get better and better. 

Tomorrow morning will come the finals for the Madrid sur Cup, very much the pinnacle and final goal of all referees here at the Madrid Sur Cup. While there are 35 referees here in Madrid, there are only 5 finals to be refereed, making a total of 20 spots (ref, Ar, Ar, fourth). The five referee spots are the most covetted spots in the tournament. Imagine how thrilled I was to be announced as the referee of the Under 13 boys final match. This will be a fantastic opportunity, an while there are 20 spots among 35 referees, I have also received a fourth official appointment for the under 17 boys. This is largely due to the fact that I can communicate (sort of) with the Spanish coaches, but nonetheless, it is fantastic to get to be a part of two final appointments, a real priviledge. 

I will write about the finals as well as giving my final remarks and comments on the tournament tomorrow at the Madrid airport on my way to Lisbon, and I already feel like I have come so far and made so many meaningful friends throuhgout this one week, I will hate to see them leave. As for those coming on to Lisbon, let's take the chance to be great and show the world what we're capable of. 

Wednesday 26 June 2013

Day 2 and 3, completion of the group stage

Day 2's matches brought with them their own sets of challenges and rewards. I was refereeing in rotation with Leonel Abreu (Ven), Michael Ryan (Eng), Sergio barragan (Esp), and myself. We had 4 games so one in each role, throughout the night of Under 16 boys. The thermostat at the beginning of our first game read a balmy 39 degrees Celsius, welcome to the desert. We were being assessed on our last three games, and needed to bring out a good performance not withstanding the number of games in the heat. To top it off, the tournament was run late so we did not get our usual breaks between games so we were exhausted. 

We were using unconventional communications gear brought by Leonel, which was walkie talkies linked up with a headset, and while it was useful, it was not the easiest to understand. The three matches which I was A/R and fourth all went well, the games varied from routine to very heated. The highlight of the matches would have had to be during Leonel's middle, when the Venezuelan referee had spoken only in English to the players and had pretended to not understand Spanish, up until the moment where he heard something he did not like. At this point, he whistled and turned to the player, and in perfect Spanish (his native language of course) said, "you think that because I do not speak Spanish to you, I do not understand it?" and then proceeded to book him, plot twist. 

The Canadian style of refereeing is very British, and quite unlike the Southern Europeans or South Americans. In Canada and Britain, we are much more tolerant towards trifling offences, and tend to attempt to man manage before throwing around cards. In Graham Poll's book, Seeing Red, he speaks of this difference, in the fact that British referees tend to let slide tackles with the studs up go when there is no contact with the player, only the ball, whereas European's punish this. The attitude itself is quite different surrounding the soccer, much alike the attitudes between the Canadian and Spanish professional team differ. The Spanish are dramatic, intense, and yappy, but they are the best. 

In my assessment of my second game, I received a 72 on the British scale in which 70 is an acceptable standard and 80 is a near perfect game. I wasn't satisfied with this, and the reason I got this was my management of the players was suited to the Canadian players and not the Spanish, and I  did not manage a penalty properly. I will have to adjust my refereeing to meet the demands of the Southern European game. During the day I went into Madrid to see the palace and a monastery and just hang around the old city. After my matches, I went along with a great group of guys (6 brits and 1 polish) to Madrid to see the nightlife. After asking for directions from many people, we stumbled across a Spanish night club and got the entire experience, from Spanish club music, to a live bongo drummer. It was a great time to meet so many Spanish people and I am so glad to have learned Spanish in school as it has proved invaluable this trip and I have become a translator, navigator. I can now say I have danced the night away at a Madrid Disco in flip flops It was a great life experience, and I am glad to say I can check that one off my bucket list. 
The Match day three team of me, Sergio Barragan (esp), and Paul Noble (eng). 

I woke up for our daily morning meeting, then proceeded to go back to bed and wake up at 2:00 pm. While I would love to credit this to jet-lag, I reckon it was more due to last nights antics. The way I see it, is you must work hard to play hard. Match day 3 began with a lot of sleeping, followed by three very routine fixtures (U14, U14, GU17). The most interesting moment was when I applied the skills I leared at the CDSRA's man management session and as an assistant referee, I saw a player kick another player with the studs when they were both on the ground, then the other team was wound up. I had the referee send off the player, and then we made sure no fights ensued. They were very routine, and this now concludes the group stage. Tomorrow should bring some interesting playoff soccer, and tonight should bring some well needed rest, that is until the group of Croatians started drinking at a "quincenera" that was happening near the hotel. 

Cheers, 

Kevin Tupper

Tuesday 25 June 2013

First Impressions, day 1 matches, and opening ceremonies of the Madrid Sur Cup

0This evening I took a moment to think for a second during half time of the match I was refereeing, and then it finally hit me, that I was refereeing two U16 clubs from Spain in a tournament in Madrid, wow, what an experience. So far the trip has been a unique chance to really see soccer in a different light and to meet some fantastic people. It began yesterday when I arrived, and I instantly met dozens of people from around the world. 

After just over 24 hours in Madrid, I have met so many referees from all different backgrounds, mostly around 18-25 years old. The majority of referees here are from England, but I have also met refs from Cyprus, Spain, Poland, Venezuela, Belgium and Italy. I am sure I will meet more people in the next week at Iber Cup, as from my understanding, this tournament serves well as a precursor of sorts to the bigger, more international, and more prestigious Iber cup. 

I arrived yesterday just in time to attend the opening ceremony of the Madrid Sur cup, and was given a great window into the coming week. It was unorganized, but was still unlike any thing at any tournament in North America.  It began with a great deal of milling about outside, but it gave me a chance to meet many of my colleagues for the week. The focal point of the ceremony was a bongo band, which was then followed with all teams and referees walking around the pitch. It was quite a nice stadium, home to a league two team in Spain, seating around 4000. It was quite something to walk the pitch surrounded with cheering fans, an attitude that I do not imagine will last. 

The first day was very Spanish, that is very unorganized, spoken nearly entirely in Spanish, and allowed me to bear witness to some very good soccer. We received our assignments in the morning, and I was to referee, and do two assistant referees of under 16 boys matches. I was with a Spanish referee who spoke no English and an English Referee who spoke no Spanish. My limited Spanish has proved essential, and I have turned into a translator for the group between the Spanish organizers and referees and the British referees. 

My game went very well, I was assessed by a Spanish Football Federation assessor who spoke little English, and his comments regarding my performance was that it was "muy bien" or "Very good" so hopefully my marks are reflective. It was an interesting dynamic to referee two Spanish teams, the Spanish do not like their referees and are very eager to protest all calls. Using my Spanish on the field was something I was grateful to have. While I was able to communicate to the players during the breaks, my language during play consisted primarily of "no, no, no" "juega (play)" "Vamos (lets go)" and  "Calmate (calm yourself). I did not end up giving any cards, and the final score was 6-1 Morejas over Torremar. 

After my match, I saw the tail end of a u16 match refereed by three british referees. In this game that ended 4-3, the referee and assistant did not call a penalty which the losing side was convinced was missed. I was not there so I cannot speculate, but what I did see was a referee get chased from the pitch, and then while walking him to the bus, we were approached by numerous screaming spanish fans, irate with anger over this call. When you are the best  football country in the world, the football is taken seriously. The tournament directors were saying that this is not unusual for Spanish fans. 

Today (June 25) I went into Madrid, and will be refereeing another three matches tonight. I am refereeing with Leonel Abreu, a Venezuelan first division referee, and will be getting to use both the beeper signal flags and the communications headsets, I am excited to try this, and will update on how the game goes.

The floods have receded back home, and I hope that the city is beginning to return to normal. No pictures yet as i can't get my photos up, they will come soon. 

Saturday 22 June 2013

Departure at last!

The time has finally come to begin this journey, and it has already been quite the adventure just to get to this point. Thursday the 20th, I received an evacuation notice for my home in Discovery Ridge. We were among the first group of people to be displaced by the so called "flood 2013" I was very fortunate to have packed all my belongings for the Europe trip that morning, so I loaded it all into the car, then rushed to assist my neighbours in sandbagging their basement from waist deep water that was rising fast. Water is fascinating, it is so immensely powerful and a truly unstoppable force, and the City of Calgary rapidly learned of its destructive capabilities. While I ended up staying at a friends Aunt's house that night, my family made the mistake of staying at the Eau Claire Sheraton, only to be evacuated from there the following morning. 

Friday was my High School Graduation for which I was the Valedictorian. Having rushed out of my evacuated house, I had thought to grab my suit and gown, but had forgot dress shoes, so there I was in flip-flops and a suit. I was lucky to be able to rely on the kindness of strangers and my friend's Uncle was able to lend me a pair. The city was in a state of emergency, and the flooding was unlike anything we had ever seen. The entire downtown was shutdown, and it seemed every major bridge in the city was underwater. Needless to say, getting anywhere was a nightmare, but I was pleased to see a nearly full graduating class eagerly walk the stage. I believe my Valedictory address went well, and it was vey well received, even my awful puns! 



Saturday, it appears as if the flood has begun to recede, but the city is devastated. The entire downtown core has been shut down, evacuated, and flooded, along with 25 community evacuations. The city estimates that over 175000 people have been displaced, and yet only 2500 are using emergency shelters, what a great testament to the open hearts and resilient attitudes of Calgarians. One of the tremendous positives of this disaster is how well the city, the emergency responders, and the people of Calgary have acted. They have ensured the safety of all of us, and worked tirelessly to save our city. We were allowed to return to our house today as it remained high and dry, but there are many who aren't so lucky, like the Calgary Saddledome.  


I have made it to the airport, and that is what matters! The final preparations are in place for the two tournaments and it is hard to believe that they are so close now! Tomorrow night in Madrid, I will be participating in the opening ceremonies of the Madrid Sur Cup, and have picked up a Canadian flag and will be representing our nation proudly. I was gifted numerous pins and coins from the Alberta Soccer Association and the Calgary District Referees Association, so I will most definitely be showcasing these two fantastic groups. Our Madrid Assignments will be given at the meeting and I will be sure to pass them on along with pictures of the opening ceremonies, I can't wait!

As for the IBer Cup, it seems as if all is set to go and is ready to begin, my final assignments are the same as what I posted earlier, except for two of the games on the Tuesday and I am now an Assistant Referee during a match with Athletico Madrid, wow. I have begun to connect with various referees at the tournaments through social networking, and have been getting to know the Quebec contingent as well as many of the internationals. One of the fun events that is in the works is a referees tournament to take place June 30th. We will play 6v6 and against other teams of referees while the match is reffed by our assessors. As our Quebecers are in Porto until the Evening, I offered my services as a free agent and was signed to a team comprised of 3 Frenchmen, 2 Italians, a Swede, a Brit, and me. While 4 of the 8 of us turned out to be goal keepers, I think we will compete for the title and be a force to reckon with. We will play teams such as the Scandinavians, the Polish, and a few teams from multiple countries. You know the tournament is coming up when the newspapers have an entire page on the tournament! I cannot wait!

I will be updating the blog as much as possible over the next two weeks, and will be including lots and lots of pictures! Stay tuned.

Tuesday 4 June 2013

18 Days until takeoff! Updates on Elite group and referee assignments.

Wow! It seems like just last week that I found out that I was accepted to go referee the Iber Cup, when in reality, that was last July! I still remember jumping up with excitement when I read the email, and the number of times I had to read it to believe the opportunity I would have. Almost a year later, here we are in June, ready to begin the experience of a lifetime.

The Iber Cup, being Tournaments Abroad's flagship tournament, has always been a showcase for international referees, and they are constantly seeking to extend its reach and bring it to an even more international level. This year, as a pilot project, they have created an "Elite Group". This 15 referee group will be headed by Mr. Joao Capela, a fifa referee who regularly referees the Portuguese first division (pictured right). The selection process began with a test on the Laws of the Game. The questions were quite challenging, and required a thorough knowledge of the intricacies of soccer. My response to the test ended up being 10 pages long, and I remember rushing to finish while at a friends ski chalet for the weekend. The results were so invariably well crafted that Mr. Capela and Daniel Curcio (president of Tournaments abroad) decided that they required more information, so they asked for a personal statement on our motives and background as a referee. I wrote about my humble beginnings as a referee, and passions for the game that we all love, and to my delight, I was selected to be a part of this elite group.

This elite group is comprised of 15 referees selected out of the 140 attending the tournament, and to quote directly from the letter they sent me:

The elite group will be a very intensive development and training program with daily sessions that will spam over the entire day. At the beginning of the tournament you will be asked to attend an introductory meeting and also undertake a battery of fitness tests at the University of Lisbon while the rest of the week will be organized as follows: in the morning, general warm up with all referees and indications on personalized warm-up to be done before each game; in the afternoon recovery practice sessions and technical practice; in the evening meetings with assessors and coaches to analyze the day’s performances as well as referee patterns and time motion.


It sounds like a phenomenal experience and I am thrilled to get to participate in this, and willdefinitely keep you posted as to what the group entails when I find out more.




because it's the cup

The Iber Cup will be taking place over the first week of July, and prior to refereeing there, I will be officiating the Madrid Sur Cup in Getafe, Spain. This is quickly approaching, and I have learned a lot of details regarding what will be occurring. The tournament is not nearly as international as the Iber Cup, with approximately 40 international refs, and primarily Spanish and Portuguese teams. Considering that these are two of the best football nations in the world, one cannot complain. During the tournament, we will be staying in Bungalows, and refereeing games nightly. They will also be treating us to luxurious local meals such as Paella, and Squid "a la Andalusa. The Madrid portion of my trip will be a great chance to meet the referees, get accustomed to the fast paced and skilled European soccer, and enjoy the beautiful area. Better keep practicing my Spanish.

On a final note, we received our tentative assignments for the first two days of the Iber Cup today, and I am very excited to be a part of some very high class matches, including the likes of Sevilla FC, and Southampton FC, and teams from India, Croatia, England, Norway, Spain, and of course, Portugal. My match schedule is as follows, keep in mind that this is subject to change.

July 1

  • 15:30 U15 Fourth Official, Southampton FC (Eng) vs. AD Barroselas (Por)
  • 16:45 U15 Assistant Referee 1, Kenkre FC (Ind) vs Almada AC (Por)
July 2
  • 9:00 U13 Fourth Official, Pro Touch SA (Eng) vs. CAC Pontinha (Por)
  • 12:45 U13 Referee, NK Hypo-Limac (Cro) vs. GD Fabril (Por)
  • 18:15 U16 Assistant Referee 1, Sevilla FC (Spa) vs. IL Stalkameratene (Nor)
  • 19:30 U17g Assistant Referee 1, Real Betis Balompie (Spa) vs. Baerums Verk IF (Nor)
Sounds like I will be a part of some fantastic matches, hopefully I am able to perform well enough to earn some high level middle games, and most importantly earn playoff and especially final assignments, that would be a dream.

I will be blogging , much more frequently as the tournament approaches, giving updates as they come, and keeping everyone informed as to my assignments, and also all of my game reports when I reach the tournaments. Thanks for taking the time to read through this, and I always appreciate feedback either by commenting on this blog or emailing me kevintupper@live.com

Read more on the tournaments at
http://www.ibercup.com/home/en and http://www.madridsurcup.com/Pages/Default.aspx. Find out more about Tournaments abroad here: http://www.tournamentsabroad.com/home.html

 

Monday 14 January 2013

158 Days to take-off, Iber Cup Elite Group

The anticipation and the excitement continue to grow as we slowly approach the Iber cup and the Madrid Cup, and the details are starting to pour in not just about the tournaments, but also about the great people that we will be working with there. I was notified a couple weeks ago that I had been selected by Daniel Curcio (Tournament organiser) and Joao Capella (Fifa referee) to be part of the initial group preselected to be whittled down into just 12 of the top flight referees of the tournament. The final group will be required to do additional training sessions, will be assessed on more games, will review assignments with Mr. Cappela, and will be required to be the best of the best. Will it be a lot of work? absolutely. is it worth it? definitely.

The Selection Process

Iber Cup Map
ELITE GROUP
2013
QUIZ SUMMARY
FIRST PHASE
(43 people) -7 Canadians
When: 25th January
Theory Test on the Laws of the Game consisting of 35 questions plus a fillin-
the-table exercise
SECOND PHASE
(29 people or 2/3 of those who submit the first test)
When: 15th March
2/A - Apply the Laws of the Game (Practical Session with Videos)
2/B – Personal Statement
2/C – Motivational Questions
THIRD PHASE
(10 people)
When: June 29th or 30th (at Jamor Sports Center, Lisbon)
FIFA Fitness Test (simplified version)

Stay tuned for the test results, and in the mean time, I will have to continue to study the Laws of the Game

We have yet to receive much information about the Madrid Sur Cup, but we continue to learn new details of the Iber Cup. With each detail, the excitement continues to build, and it will truly be a fantastic experience in all aspects.


The beach in front of  the referee school

Where teams attending the Iber Cup come from? 


This post is fairly brief, but I just wanted to post an update as to how the preparations are going, and will post the results of the selection process of the Elite group. 

Cheers, 

Kevin Tupper