1. votes. Pierluigi Collina. Widely considered the best referee of all time, Collina officiated in three World Cups and a Champions League final. · 2. After Daniele Orsatto () and Felix Brych (), Poland's referee Szymon Marciniak is crowned by The best referee as THE BEST WORLD REFEREE ! He. Szymon Marciniak Named Best Referee in the World Poland's best arbiter receives well-deserved laurels all the time. Recently, at the Champions of Sport Gala. Stephanie Frappart Best Referee of the Year Once again, a woman has achieved recognition as Best Referee of the Year. She was also the first female official.
I locked myself in my room for a day and a half, taking notes and watching every minute of every match. They pressure has arguably never been so high following numerous controversial VAR blunders. One of this season's worst was Liverpool's Luis Diaz goal being incorrectly disallowed for offside against Spurs due to miscommunications from the on-field referee.
Audio from the control room revealed the officials understood they made a mistake but deemed it too late to reverse the decision. During his interview, Collina admitted that the pressure to get things right immediately can lead to mistakes. He added: "Sometimes accuracy and speed don't go together. If you want to be sure, it takes time.
UK Edition. US Edition. You need the courage to take controversial decisions. The Focus: Is refereeing also a team job — or to what extent did your assistants help you. It can also be the assistants who decide whether a goal was scored or not — whether the ball actually crossed the line. So the assistants help and wave their flags when something happens, but the final decision is always up to the referee.
This will definitely help. Collina: Back in , UEFA asked referees what we think about an electronic control system for the goal line. There are situations in which a referee or an assistant cannot assess what happens because it is beyond the power of the human eye.
As long as no such system exists, referees just have to do their best. The Focus: So we have to live with the fact that referees — being human — will make mistakes. Making mistakes is part of the job. The best referee When a match is shown live on TV, two minutes later everyone on the field of play knows that the referee made a mistake. TV people talk to journalists beside the pitch, they talk to the benches, and they inform the players.
So two minutes after you make a decision, the players know exactly if the penalty was a penalty. And they tell you so, and try to influence you. Collina: The best thing is always to forget it. When a forward misses a great scoring opportunity early in the match, he can either continue to regret his mistake, and the match will become a nightmare, or he can look ahead, and go on to deliver a good performance.
That is something a referee must not do, because it doubles his mistake. After the match he has to try to understand why he made the mistake, and in this process, technology like videos is very useful. A critical post-match review is another important part of improving your performance. The Focus: Does the kind of authority that a referee needs come naturally or is it something you can learn?
Collina: You can be an excellent piano player but to be at the very top you need to have something special in your DNA. What you can learn is to understand the way people think. In business you talk to your staff about the consequences of any given decision. That is part of the teamwork in which everything is analyzed.
Collina: Like any great player, the referee should be able to control his emotions. One of the differences between a good player and a great one is how they handle their emotions. Collina: Every match is difficult. If you ever think a match is going to be easy, you will lack concentration and your performance will suffer.
The Focus: Now that you have retired from refereeing, will you go back to being a financial consultant. Now I am going to take the time to think about my future and enjoy being with my family. Pierluigi Collina was born in Bologna, Italy, in His career as a referee began when a classmate persuaded him to take a course in refereeing. In he was appointed by FIFA to referee international matches.
Career highlights included refereeing the Olympic Final, Nigeria v. Olympique Marseille. He also officiated at the World Cup and at the and European Championships. He announced his retirement from refereeing in August following a dispute with the Italian Football Federation over a sponsorship deal.
Collina originally trained as a financial consultant. He holds a degree in Business Studies from the University of Bologna and an honorary degree from the University of Hull. For his services to sport, Italian President Ciampi conferred upon him the title of Commendatore of the Italian Republic. You are switching to an alternate language version of the Egon Zehnder website.
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