Yellows v whites team u16s.
Incident one:
In the first half yellow cross the ball into the penalty area and the white player tries to push him in the back. Player stays up and ball goes out of play. I award a penalty.
Away manager is furious that i gave it. I had an assistant referee who was also a qualified ref who said at half time - "it was a pen but i wouldn't have given it as i don't have the confidence." He was not on the game as a neutral so i couldn't have asked him for help with that decision. I was on the d of the penalty area and this happened 3 yards from the goal line. How much closer should i have been? My view was clear but i was told i was too far away to give it.
Incident two:
White player fouls yellow player and i give a free kick. White player then kicks yellow player while yellow player is on the ground. I'm about 8-10 yards away. I then get close to the incident (within two yards). I'm concentrating on the white player as he's getting the red one. Then in the next two or three seconds I see the same white player shove the same yellow player. Against my instinct i stand between the two players and stop them getting to each other. In all my years reffing i have never done this but today my instinct was to keep them separate. I don't know why but i did.
I then call over the captain of the white team and tell him his player has kicked and pushed so he's getting the red one.
The manager of the white team then loses his control and tells me the yellow player should also be sent off for violent behaviour.
At half time a member of the crowd tells me he is videoing the game and i should be embarrassed for missing the yellow player's alleged violence. He wasn't being rude so i must take it there is something here i missed.
In the few seconds this all happened i can honestly say i did not see the yellow player do anything wrong BUT sometimes you get a sense you may have missed something major. I was also so focused on the white player i must have missed something the other player did.
The yellow team then subbed this player straight away and the white manager told me they did that as they know the player should have been sent off.
Would you have done anything differently? Was i close enough to make the penalty award? Do you ever stop players getting to each other?
Incident one:
In the first half yellow cross the ball into the penalty area and the white player tries to push him in the back. Player stays up and ball goes out of play. I award a penalty.
Away manager is furious that i gave it. I had an assistant referee who was also a qualified ref who said at half time - "it was a pen but i wouldn't have given it as i don't have the confidence." He was not on the game as a neutral so i couldn't have asked him for help with that decision. I was on the d of the penalty area and this happened 3 yards from the goal line. How much closer should i have been? My view was clear but i was told i was too far away to give it.
Incident two:
White player fouls yellow player and i give a free kick. White player then kicks yellow player while yellow player is on the ground. I'm about 8-10 yards away. I then get close to the incident (within two yards). I'm concentrating on the white player as he's getting the red one. Then in the next two or three seconds I see the same white player shove the same yellow player. Against my instinct i stand between the two players and stop them getting to each other. In all my years reffing i have never done this but today my instinct was to keep them separate. I don't know why but i did.
I then call over the captain of the white team and tell him his player has kicked and pushed so he's getting the red one.
The manager of the white team then loses his control and tells me the yellow player should also be sent off for violent behaviour.
At half time a member of the crowd tells me he is videoing the game and i should be embarrassed for missing the yellow player's alleged violence. He wasn't being rude so i must take it there is something here i missed.
In the few seconds this all happened i can honestly say i did not see the yellow player do anything wrong BUT sometimes you get a sense you may have missed something major. I was also so focused on the white player i must have missed something the other player did.
The yellow team then subbed this player straight away and the white manager told me they did that as they know the player should have been sent off.
Would you have done anything differently? Was i close enough to make the penalty award? Do you ever stop players getting to each other?


