Impact of Calciopoli on Italian Referees (1 Viewer)

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
#1
MILAN, May 16 (Reuters) - Italian referees have received more media attention than many of the country's players this season after last year's match-fixing scandal heightened scrutiny of their performances.

Criticism of referees is nothing new in world soccer but the Italians have taken the analysis to a new level even though there has been no hint of impropriety from any of the officials still working.

Fans in other countries await team news on Fridays ahead of weekend fixtures but in Italy all anyone wants to know is the name of the referee.

Club Web sites flash up their assigned referee as soon as it is announced and then post detailed biographies and lists of recent controversial decisions.

The Gazzetta dello Sport newspaper publishes a huge matrix of numbers relating to referees, including home and away penalties awarded and performance marks given to them by journalists.

In most European nations, the referee is subjected to abuse on the field but when he leaves the stadium and the post-match recriminations are over he is largely forgotten. He may be blamed for incompetence but rarely accused of cheating.

Italy's obsession with referees was highlighted in the 2002 World Cup when the nation blamed Ecuadorean referee Byron Moreno for their elimination by South Korea. Conspiracy theorists said South Korea were being favoured as they were tournament hosts.

Last season's match-fixing scandal or "calciopoli", in which giants Juventus were demoted for trying to secure favourable officials, has intensified the fixation.

Top referee Massimo De Santis was banned for four years after being found guilty of conspiring to rig Serie A games.

Other teams had points docked but the focus was on Juventus, who had been accused of gaining fortunate refereeing decisions long before the scandal broke.

The subject continues to be a favourite topic even as Juve fight for promotion from the less than glamorous Serie B back up to the top flight.

On Saturday, referee Nicola Ayroldi awarded Juventus a late, debateable penalty and sent off two Bologna players for protesting.

Bologna sporting director Fabrizio Salvatori was furious.

"The disappointment is huge. Against Juventus, we are always unlucky. It could not have been a penalty. How do you justify a decision like that to the people?" he told the club Web site (www.bolognafc.it).

"It's understandable and logical that someone loses their patience in circumstances like this. If that was a penalty, they would have to give 10 or 20 in every game."

Cesare Gussoni, the head of Italian referees, criticised Ayroldi, the first time he has openly done such a thing, and also expressed disappointment in emerging referee Luca Marelli who had faced criticism for his handling of another Serie B game, Rimini v Bari.

"Ayroldi and Marelli were rather out of form and when a player is not at his best, the player is not criticised but the coach who put him on the pitch," Gussoni told reporters.

"Therefore I am the referee's assigner and I would have done well to have kept them both on the bench. We can say that it has been a matter of inexact decisions that deserve criticism."

Gussoni, who has been in charge of referees for the last six months, said he would like Italy's most famous former referee Pierluigi Collina to be the next assignment secretary.

"The whole day in Serie A and the rest in B went quite well but it weighs heavily that two matches went badly, even if no one is questioning their good faith," added Gussoni.

"If any referee has made a mistake in bad faith, he will be heavily punished."

Last month the Italian Referees' Association (AIA) suspended seven referees and two linesmen after an investigation by magistrates threw up new allegations of match-fixing connected to the original inquiry.

In Germany, referee Robert Hoyzer was sentenced to two years and five months in prison in 2005 for fixing matches as part of a two-million-euro ($2.7-million) betting fraud.

Such cases are isolated but it has not stopped Italy from distrusting every referee.

Reuters

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This stupid Gussoni doesn't help his referees with criticizing them loudly. If he thinks they're not qualified, then he has to stop them. If he feels they're cheating, then he has to investigate it. If he has nothing but some odd cases in rare matches, then he has to shut up. Italian football has lost its credibility because of characters like him.
 

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Boudz

Mercato Tourist
Aug 1, 2002
2,608
#2
Welcome to a Moratti's controlled football world!! Where it is acceptable to criticize anyone anywhere anytime.
 

Marc

Softcore Juventino
Jul 14, 2006
21,649
#3
All Italian referees should be fired and FIGC should install computers and put them on the field instead of refs so that Moratti can blame computers configurations when his team starts losing again.
 

Meow

Senior Member
Jun 8, 2003
2,377
#4
Funny no one mentioned how Juve have been treated like crap in serie B by all those incompetent ref.

How many penalties we get for the whole fxxking season? How many of our players get carded and banned excessively (5 for Nedved? 2 for Balza, just because he protested against a lousy ref decision?)

Damn, let's get the facts and stats right. We are the true victim here...
 

RAMI-N

★ ★ ★
Aug 22, 2006
21,469
#5
Funny no one mentioned how Juve have been treated like crap in serie B by all those incompetent ref.

How many penalties we get for the whole fxxking season? How many of our players get carded and banned excessively (5 for Nedved? 2 for Balza, just because he protested against a lousy ref decision?)

Damn, let's get the facts and stats right. We are the true victim here...
:agree: Word
 

AngelaL

Jinx Minx
Aug 25, 2006
10,215
#8
MILAN, May 16 (Reuters) - Italian referees have received more media attention than many of the country's players this season after last year's match-fixing scandal heightened scrutiny of their performances...........

........Such cases are isolated but it has not stopped Italy from distrusting every referee.

Reuters
---------------------------------------------------------

This stupid Gussoni doesn't help his referees with criticizing them loudly. If he thinks they're not qualified, then he has to stop them. If he feels they're cheating, then he has to investigate it. If he has nothing but some odd cases in rare matches, then he has to shut up. Italian football has lost its credibility because of characters like him.
How true!

Funny no one mentioned how Juve have been treated like crap in serie B by all those incompetent ref.

How many penalties we get for the whole fxxking season? How many of our players get carded and banned excessively (5 for Nedved? 2 for Balza, just because he protested against a lousy ref decision?)

Damn, let's get the facts and stats right. We are the true victim here...
Well said, Meow!
 
Oct 3, 2004
1,118
#9
There is no impact. The truth is, Italian refs are sh*t, and will always be sh*t. Serie A next season won't change, and there will be juuuust as much controversial refereeing as past seasons.

I wish had all the moviola's to prove this to you from other matches...I'll try and do this next year in the multimedia forum.....
 

gsol

Senior Member
Oct 14, 2007
1,448
#10
There is no impact. The truth is, Italian refs are sh*t, and will always be sh*t. Serie A next season won't change, and there will be juuuust as much controversial refereeing as past seasons.

I wish had all the moviola's to prove this to you from other matches...I'll try and do this next year in the multimedia forum.....
Sure you don't want to restate that now in hindsight?

This year smashed the record for referee errors and we got the worst of it according to ADICONSUM's Statistical Research Analysts.

Over 50% of the games were compromized. The team that benefitted most was Inter while we got screwed the hardest.
 

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