By Andrew Crawshaw
I thought it was time I had a look at refereeing in the other major leagues in Europe to try and determine categorically what the differences are between the way the PGMO operate compared with elsewhere.
Germany – Bundesliga
Number of teams 18
Number of referees – 23. 22 men and one woman (new this season)
Number of matches by each referee – max 14 (Tobias Stieler), min 5 (Martin Peterson and Sven Jablonski). Typical number between 8 and 12
Oldest Referee – Marcus Schmidt 44, Youngest – Sven Jablonski 27. Average age 36.9. Retirement age 48
Average age when appointed 31.1 years
Age | Date first match | Age first match | Matches this year | |
Tobias Stieler | 36 | 17/2/2012 | 30 | 14 |
Manuel Gräfe | 43 | 14/9/2004 | 30 | 13 |
Daniel Siebert | 41 | 01/09/2004 | 28 | 13 |
Dr Felix Bruch | 42 | 28/8/2004 | 29 | 12 |
Denis Aytekin | 39 | 27/9/2008 | 30 | 12 |
Sascha Stegemann | 32 | 31/8/2014 | 29 | 12 |
Christian Dingert | 37 | 12/9/2010 | 30 | 11 |
Felix Zwayer | 36 | 15/8/2009 | 28 | 11 |
Robert Hartmann | 38 | 19/2/2011 | 31 | 11 |
Benjamin Brand | 28 | 22/8/2015 | 26 | 11 |
Markus Schmidt | 44 | 16/8/2003 | 29 | 10 |
Guido Winkman | 43 | 16/8/2008 | 34 | 10 |
Bastian Dankert | 39 | 22/9/2012 | 32 | 10 |
Harm Osmers | 33 | 10/9/2016 | 31 | 10 |
Dr Robert Kampa | 36 | 17/9/2016 | 34 | 9 |
Benjamin Cortus | 35 | 25/9/2016 | 34 | 9 |
Patric Ittrich | 38 | 13/2/2016 | 37 | 9 |
Frank Willenborg | 39 | 20/9/2016 | 37 | 8 |
Marco Fritz | 41 | 22/9/2009 | 31 | 8 |
Bibiana Steinhaus | 39 | 10/9/2017 | 38 | 6 |
Sören Storks | 29 | 19/9/2017 | 28 | 6 |
Martin Peterson | 33 | 20/9/2017 | 32 | 5 |
Sven Jablonski | 27 | 17/9/2017 | 27 | 5 |
Averages | 36.9 | 31.1 |
data from transfermarkt.com 05/03/18
Spain La Liga
Number of teams – 20
Number of referees – 20
Number of matches by each referee – max 17 (González González), min 10 (Álvarez Izqueirdo). Everyone else between 15 and 11
Oldest Referee – Álvarez Izqueirdo 45, Youngest – De Burgos Bengoetxea 31, Average age 38.2. Retirement age 45
Average age when appointed 31.8 years
Age | Date first match | Age first match | Matches this year | |
González González | 43 | 29/8/2009 | 34 | 17 |
Mario Melero López | 38 | 24/8/2014 | 35 | 15 |
Undiano Mallenco | 44 | 10/9/2000 | 26 | 14 |
Estrada Fernández | 41 | 30/8/2009 | 33 | 14 |
Iglesias Villanueva | 42 | 13/9/2010 | 35 | 14 |
Santiago Jaime Latre | 38 | 28/8/2014 | 35 | 14 |
Jesús Gil Monzano | 33 | 25/8/2012 | 28 | 14 |
Daniel Jesús Trujillo Suárez | 34 | 11/9/2016 | 33 | 14 |
Juan Martinez Munuera | 37 | 17/8/2013 | 31 | 14 |
José Maria Sánchez Martínez | 34 | 29/8/2015 | 31 | 14 |
Pablo González Fuentes | 39 | 27/8/2017 | 37 | 14 |
Javier Alberola Rojas | 26/8/2017 | 14 | ||
David Fernández Borbalán | 44 | 30/11/1997 | 24 | 13 |
Del Cerro Grande | 42 | 11/9/2011 | 35 | 13 |
Antonio Miguel Matéu Lahos | 40 | 13/9/2008 | 31 | 13 |
Hernández Hernández | 35 | 20/8/2012 | 29 | 13 |
José Luis Munuera Montero | 33 | 22/8/2016 | 32 | 13 |
De Burgos Bengoetxea | 31 | 23/8/2015 | 29 | 11 |
Medié Jiménez | 33 | 21/8/2017 | 32 | 11 |
Àlvarez Izqueirdo | 45 | 24/9/2006 | 34 | 10 |
Averages | 38.2 | 31.8 |
data from transfermarkt.com 05/03/18
France Ligue 1
Number of teams – 20
Number of referees – 22
Number of matches by each referee – max 18 (Francois Letexier), min 1 (Sandro Schärer). Typical numbers between 16 and 11
Oldest Referee – Tony Chapron (45), Youngest – Francois Letexier (27), average age 37.3. Retirement age – referees above the age of 43 are actively encouraged to retire.
Average age when appointed years 31.0
Age | Date first match | Age first match | Matches this year | |
Francois Letexier | 27 | 23/1/2016 | 26 | 18 |
Antony Gautier | 40 | 11/8/2007 | 29 | 16 |
Frank Schneider | 38 | 5/3/2011 | 31 | 16 |
Mikael Lesage | 42 | 11/8/2012 | 37 | 16 |
Jérôme Brisard | 31 | 14/1/2017 | 39 | 16 |
Ruddy Buquet | 42 | 9/8/2008 | 31 | 15 |
Benoît Millot | 36 | 13/8/2011 | 29 | 15 |
Benoît Bastian | 35 | 6/8/2011 | 28 | 15 |
Johan Hamel | 37 | 6/3/2011 | 30 | 15 |
Karim Abed | 28 | 13/8/2016 | 27 | 15 |
Amaury Delerue | 40 | 18/8/2012 | 35 | 14 |
Olivier Thual | 41 | 16/8/2003 | 27 | 13 |
Sébastien Desiage | 44 | 6/8/2011 | 37 | 13 |
Thomas Leonard | 36 | 5/3/2011 | 29 | 13 |
Stéphane Jochem | 39 | 10/8/2013 | 34 | 12 |
Nicholas Rainville | 35 | 7/8/2010 | 28 | 11 |
Clément Turpin | 35 | 16/8/2008 | 26 | 11 |
Jérôme Miguelgorry | 41 | 6/3/2011 | 34 | 9 |
Hakim Ben El Hadj | 39 | 5/3/2011 | 32 | 8 |
Tony Chapron | 45 | 7/8/2004 | 32 | 7 |
Sébastien Moreira | 41 | 22/8/2009 | 32 | 4 |
Sandro Schärer | 29 | 17/2/2018 | 29 | 1 |
Averages | 37.3 | 31.0 |
data from transfermarkt.com 05/03/18
Italy Serie A
Number of teams – 20
Number of referees – 25
Number of matches by each referee – max 14 (Davide Massa), min 2 (Gianluca Aureliano, Eugenio Abbattista, Daniele Chiffi). Typical numbers between 14 and 12 (all but the three referees on just 2 games)
Oldest Referee – Paolo Tagliavento 45), Youngest -Rosario Abisso (32), Average age 38.3. Retirement age not known
Average age when appointed 30.8 years
Age | Date first match | Age first match | Matches this year | |
Davide Massa | 36 | 23/1/2011 | 29 | 14 |
Luca Banti | 44 | 29/5/2005 | 31 | 12 |
Gianluca Rocchi | 44 | 16/5/2004 | 30 | 12 |
Paolo Silvio Mazzoleni | 42 | 16/4/2005 | 30 | 12 |
Daniele Orsato | 42 | 17/12/2006 | 31 | 12 |
Daniele Doveri | 39 | 28/2/2010 | 31 | 12 |
Marco Guida | 37 | 31/1/2010 | 29 | 12 |
Michael Fabbri | 34 | 8/5/2013 | 29 | 12 |
Fabio Maresca | 36 | 18/5/2014 | 33 | 12 |
Claudio Gavillucci | 38 | 27/4/2013 | 33 | 12 |
Rosario Abisso | 32 | 6/1/2015 | 29 | 12 |
Paolo Tagliavento | 45 | 16/5/2004 | 31 | 11 |
Paolo Valerie | 39 | 23/12/2007 | 29 | 11 |
Piero Giacomelli | 40 | 3/4/2011 | 33 | 11 |
Gianluca Manganiello | 36 | 18/5/2014 | 32 | 11 |
Maurizio Mariano | 35 | 6/1/2013 | 30 | 11 |
Luca Pairetto | 35 | 25/9/2013 | 29 | 11 |
Antonio Damato | 46 | 10/12/2006 | 34 | 10 |
Gianpaolo Calvarese | 42 | 24/5/2009 | 33 | 10 |
Massimiliano Irrati | 38 | 18/3/2012 | 32 | 10 |
Marco Di Bello | 36 | 12/4/2012 | 30 | 10 |
Fabrizio Pasqua | 35 | 11/5/2013 | 30 | 10 |
Gianluca Aureliano | 38 | 18/5/2014 | 34 | 2 |
Eugenio Abbattista | 35 | 24/2/2013 | 30 | 2 |
Daniele Chiffi | 33 | 11/5/2014 | 29 | 2 |
Averages | 38.3 | 30.8 |
data from transfermarkt.com 06/03/18
Finally England and the Premier League
Number of teams – 20
Number of referees – 19
Number of matches by each referee – max 24 (Michael Oliver), min 1 (Simon Hooper). Typical numbers between 21 and 11 (5 referees with either 11 or 12 games)
Oldest Referee – Roger East (52) Youngest – Bobby Madley (31), average age 42.2. No formal Retirement age, requirement to pass annual assessment.
Average age when appointed 34.5 years
Age | Date first match | Age first match | Matches this year | |
Michael Oliver | 33 | 21/8/2010 | 25 | 24 |
Martin Atkinson | 46 | 18/9/2004 | 33 | 21 |
Jonathan Moss | 47 | 4/1/2011 | 40 | 21 |
Andre Marriner | 46 | 13/11/2004 | 33 | 20 |
Anthony Taylor | 39 | 3/2/2010 | 31 | 20 |
Craig Pawson | 38 | 2/3/2013 | 33 | 19 |
Mike Dean | 50 | 9/9/2000 | 32 | 18 |
Neil Swarbrick | 48 | 11/12/2010 | 40 | 17 |
Kevin Friend | 45 | 20/9/2009 | 38 | 16 |
Graham Scott | 49 | 29/11/2014 | 45 | 15 |
Bobby Madley | 31 | 27/4/2013 | 27 | 15 |
Lee Mason | 45 | 4/2/2006 | 34 | 13 |
Roger East | 52 | 1/9/2012 | 47 | 13 |
Lee Probert | 45 | 13/1/2007 | 34 | 12 |
Stuart Attwell | 34 | 23/8/2008 | 25 | 12 |
Mike Jones | 50 | 30/8/2008 | 40 | 11 |
Paul Tierney | 37 | 30/8/2014 | 34 | 11 |
Chris Kavanagh | 32 | 8/4/2017 | 32 | 11 |
Simon Hooper | 35 | 8/8/2015 | 33 | 1 |
Averages | 42.2 | 34.5 |
data from transfermarkt.com 06/03/18
So we can clearly see that there a number of very significant differences between the referees in the Premier League compared with the other major leagues in Europe. The principal differences are :-
- Significantly older – Antonio Donato (age 46) in Italy is the oldest in the four leagues I have compared to the PL. Roger East is 52, Mike Jones and Mike Dean are 50, Graham Scott is 49, Neil Swarbrick 48 and Martin Atkinson and Andre Marriner 46.
- The average age of referees in the pL is 42.2, significantly higher than in any of the other leagues (Germany 36.9, Spain 38.2, France 37.3 and Italy 38.3).
- The average when appointed to the PL is 34.5 years, against 31.1 in Germany, 31.8 in Spain, 31.0 in France and 30.8 in Italy.
- The highest number of games any of our reference groups has undertaken is 18. In the PL six referees have exceeded that number with Michael Oliver the hardest worked top flight referee in Europe having done 24.
- The EPL has the fewest referees of all of the major European leagues and has the greatest difference between the highest and lowest numbers of games undertaken by individuals of all five leagues considered.
And don’t forget that most EPL referees come from either Yorkshire or Lancashire. But od course, the referee supreme, Mike Riley, comes from, and is based in Leeds.
The age thing is very interesting and just shows how complaint we are as a nation
Referees and assistants at the highest level in England used to be self employed and in terms of officiating have an enforced retirement age of 48 Howerver in 2010 a tribunal in Sheffield ruled that it was contrary to discrimination laws to enforce retirement based on age.
At the time although appointed by PGMOL the officials weren’t actually employed by the organisation that meant they didn’t have a case for unfair dismissal.
I am not quite sure how refs are treated in other European leagues but in England they are now paid employees of PGMOL
As a result of the ruling in England the SPL in Scotland likewise had to abandon their retirement rules.
FIFA used to have a ruling that match officials had to retire upon reaching a certain age that ruling has now been removed from their statutes which is ironic when you think that they have now decided that WC refs can’t be over a certain age.
@MikeT,
Glad you were able to see this article. The points Andrew is making is what I was trying to get across in regards to number of referees and match distribution.
Germany – 19 refs between 8 and 14 matches
Spain- 16 refs between 13 and 15 matches. All 20 between 10 and 17
Italy – 22 refs between 10 and 14 matches
England- 18 refs between 11 and 24
If they were properly and evenly assigned, Hooper would have officiated matches in double digits and no ref would have been above 20 matches already.
Just watching the Real PSG match..
All the referees and assistants look fit professional and capable of doing the job.
None of the joking, alwight Wayne, Harry niceties that our northern brown envelope receiving, Rolex owners in sight.
Jerry don’t get me wrong I don’t think the games are distributed correctly but I don’t believe we need more referee.
Over a 40 week season it really shouldn’t be that challenging for a full time referee to officiate in say 25 league games and yes I know that there are other commitments such as FA cup and European games but even if you add all those commitments in its unlikely even Oliver will officiate in 40 club games in a season.
Is one game a week on average really that onerous?
The arguement being put forward is that the PL , based on other leagues, need more refers the counter arguement could be other leagues possibly have too many.
And yes I know that suggestion is going to go down like a lead ballon but Is it really unreasonable to expect professional referees to at least match the number of games expected from players?
Mike,
So far this season Man United have only had 11 referees – how is that good for the game?
Off topic – our U18s breezed into the semi final of their FA Cup tonight beating Colchester 5 goals to 1. Well done lads!
Andrew
On the face of it it is a bit strange
Let’s ignore Hooper so on the CL of it 7 elite refs have not officiated in a Utd game this season
East, Tierney and Kavanagh I think may well be Utd supporters so that is understandably why they haven’t either this season and having had no more than a cursory look at the records for past years I am not sure they have ever had a Utd games.
But I genuinely have no explanation as to why the others haven’t had a Man Utd game as past records suggest they have had utd games prior to this season although there is confusion regarding Attwell and Masons past games.
@Mike T,
Based on your own argument, the Premier League would need a minimum of 20 full time referees to do 1 match a week (10 games per match week, 2 officials per match as 1st and 4th official).
Referees, just like players, can get injured that’s why teams have reserve players. Remember Lee Probert’s injury issues? The players are also half the age of many of the PL refs listed. Just like players, the refs can also move on. Mark Clattenberg?
PGMO is essentially playing the whole season 2 men down (only 18 full time officials) to start with. The refs are set up to fail from the beginning.
Key to refs fitness is that the referee has to more or less travel across the field ‘with’ the ball, making it more physically demanding. He/she does not pass the officiating on to a different official in each half of the pitch but effectively covers a large part of the pitch with assistants covering the extremities.
The primary issue is that there is no random selection of matches but selective appointments that basically corrupt the fairness of the game. If appointments were by ballot then there would be less reason to feel bias.
What would be interesting is distance travelled by the referees in each league because the EPL have the older ref,s and the games are mostly played at a higher pace then other leagues could count for their error rate which is always PGMO best in the world statistics
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/43274988
Brilliant article, two great quotes, natural manager! Nelson Mandela!
Teachings adapyove shape through intelligence am so interpretation.
We have a very intelligent front 3, we need a fourth and. A midfielder and another CB, who bloody think.
Some need yo learn to think, but have natural ability!
Interesting how Poch and co interpret this one! Ahead buy not really!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/43202720
Hmm the gongs on a t the BBC are now interesting, yes, yes Jack!
Jerry.
I am not aware of records regarding 4th officials and yes quite often that appointment is taken by someone from the elite list who hasn’t a game on that day but who are often scheduled for a game later in that game week.
I am not 100% sure but I think there is only one matchady a season when all games are played on the same day.
That said in the PL handbook there is a long list of referees on the national list who are qualified as fourth officials and indeed do undertake that role.
There is no requirement whatsoever for an elite list ref to take charge of FA cup or league cup games although they do .
There are only 380 PL games in a season and including the FA cup final there are only 5 match days from the 3rd round . After the 3rd round there aren’t enough games for every elite referee even if that group officiated every game.
Yes refs do get injured indeed one is at the moment but historically it’s rare to have more than one out of commission but even if you did have two out for a complete PL season and operated on a fair distribution of games then that’s only 24 PL games in the middle in a season.
Theres a maximum 4 FA cup games ( no ref would take charge in both the semi final and the final itself) ok add in a couple of league cup games and another couple for FA cup replays than your up to 30 -32 games in a season. I really don’t think that Gould be that challenging for a full time professional over a 40 week season.
Menace
There is no doubt that ref have huge demands on them and it’s one of the reasons why full time officials with no outside jobs have more recovery time, can work on their fitness and based on geography in England the distances traveled between the majority of refs is far less than most other leagues
Again as they are full time they generally undertake travel to their allocated games on the morning prior to the game whereas I read that say for instance in Spain that often don’t arrive till late in the day prior to matchday.
I actually quite like have your idea of random appoints by way of a ballot.It might get a little complex if a ref had to pull out through injury or illness but how about a reserve ref being again selected at random at the same time from either refs who’d they have a game or the second group of PGMOL refs
Might not make great TV but who knows the PL could no doubt manufacture another’ set of TV rights after all Sky are always looking for a bargain!
FANTASTIC ARTICLE! One of the most in-depth analysis I have read in the last couple of months! Bravo, Andrew!
A ref in a top competition (CL matches) runs on average between 13-15 km in 90 minutes. But there have been cases found in the US that a ref ran 19 km in a match. That is almost half a marathon! But even with let us say 15 km per match it is very unlikely that a ref can deliver top performances 3 matches in a week. Because unlike with let us say athletics where you can run on automatic pilot a ref also has the mental aspect to take care of.
I have gone to matches with my head full of problems but after the match they had all gone because the focus in a match is so complete you cannot think of anything else. But this also means that the focus during a match is so high and that is causing more fatigue.
When are most errors made by players and refs? Mostly in the closing stages of a match. That is mostly because of physical fatigue but also because of losing the focus.
The more matches you do as a ref the more you open yourself up to errors. So the governing body (at least a decent governing body) knows or should know this and make sure that refs don’t go in the red zone of their physical and mental health.
Walter, it’s almost like someone wants the ref to make mistakes. 🙂
If the PL refs were flying aeroplanes, there would be regular crashes due to mental fatigue.
Nmenace is one of the smarter infidels
What’s that, we have his IP address, confirmed!
I think I’ll watch the old lady, Juve! Juve!
Douglas Costa no penalty, yellow Sandro ex Sheraton grand dive Tripoiier, diving Ali!
One more round, for Spurs and liverpool and United. City can take it, but anyone who draws Real, well, CR7 the will to win, Messi is pissed about the best player award so has come alive!
Bayern are reviving up. Don’t underestimate Jose and his anti football!
Very interesting. Thanks for doing all that research, Andrew. With our referees being so much older, and carrying on for so much longer, it’s almost as if they are the only ones trusted to do …. whatever they’re doing.
@MikeT,
Just so you are aware, the 4th official is always from the select group. The 4th official has to be able to take over in case of injury to the main ref or assistant referee.
An excellent article, I would point out that the English referees officiate games on the English Football League, FA Cup, League Cup and travel the country to act in 4th official role
Succession planning and the pathway to the top is problematic