World Cup Series Ep. 4 - Refereeing Controversy
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World Cup Series Ep. 4 - Refereeing Controversy
It is said referees have the hardest job in football. You can do your job perfectly 99.9% of the time, and have your entire career defined by the 0.1%. You are a figure of hatred, of derision, sometimes even of violent intent. But you lace up your boots, pick up your whistle and go again next week.
As football fans, most of us can forgive minor mistakes, basic human error. But when a decision decides if your nation progresses or goes home, when a decision leads to injury or farce, or simply when you cannot believe the evidence of your own eyes that an error so brazen can be allowed - we universally cannot stand for it.
Today we present our top 10 refereeing controversies, from 1930 through to the modern day. We have dodgy timekeeping, fascist influencers, bloody battles, hands of God and possibly the single worst challenge in football history going unpunished.
There is pure speculation on our part, as always, such as wondering how one host nation in South Korea, 2002, can be the beneficiary of so many fortuitous decisions during their run to the semi-finals, and what might motivate an organisation such as FIFA to facilitate such good luck. Theoretically, of course.
Mentioned in the episode (viewer discretion is advised) - Schumacher's challenge on Battiston in Seville, 1982.
https://youtu.be/6FtBPjqOlEg?is=H1CY6jBzl09_Lsng