Audio By Carbonatix
Refereeing in SA is in crisis today after all but one of the country's top match officials failed their pre-season fitness tests, according to a report on the daily newspaper the Sowetan.
The daily paper reported on Tuesday that only Daniel Bennett - who is earmarked for potential World Cup action in two years' time - passed Sunday's physical tests at the start of the annual pre-season workshop from the list of an elite panel of officials.
Others like Jerome Damon, Lwandile Mfiki, Victor Hlungwani, Buyile Gqubule and Charl Theron all failed the tests, plunging the domestic game into a major dilemma, officials said.
A total of 14 of the 25 referees who underwent the test failed and by rights are now ineligible to officiate at matches in the Premier Soccer League (PSL) or the National First Division (NFD) for the next six months.
"It was carnage on the track," one official at the Fifa-conducted tests is quoted by Sowetan, adding that the tests proceeded two days of lectures for a total of 80 officials - referees and linesmen.
The majority of referees who were successful in the running tests at the Boksburg Stadium are young and inexperienced, officials said. This puts both the SA Football Association (Safa), who oversee the refereeing structures, and the PSL in a dilemma.
There are two options ahead:
To bend the rules and allow a retaking of the tests to get more experienced referees onto the panel before the start of the new season. This would go against the strict policy over recent years that has seen officials like Damon, Theron, Yugesh Anjith and Matthew Dyer sitting out large stretches of the season.
The second alternative is to stick to the rules and promote junior officials to take charge of PSL matches, where they are bound to make more mistakes in the pressure cauldron of PSL competitions, thereby raising the ire of the clubs.
Last season, clubs complained bitterly about a perceived decline in the standard of officiating, although referees and their assistants come under much more intense scrutiny these days. The crisis also raises questions over the efficiency of current refereeing structures.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Volta Regional Minister assures residents of crime-free yuletide
5 minutes -
GOC secures financial support ahead of 2026 Commonwealth Games
7 minutes -
AMA to maintain toll collection and 24-hour sanitation drive during festive season
9 minutes -
Government to reform cultural, creative sector policies Â
9 minutes -
Obuasi Bitters CEO donates to over 1,000 widows and vulnerable groups in Obuasi
11 minutes -
Ashanti Region: NADMO prioritises preventive measures to reduce road carnage Â
13 minutes -
Teacher Trainees demand urgent reforms on exams, infrastructure, and welfare
26 minutes -
GoldBod off-takers’ fees, trading shortfalls deepen BoG Gold-for-Reserves losses to $214m in 9 months – IMF Report
49 minutes -
‘We’ll meet you in court’- DVLA boss fires back at VEMAG over injunction on new number plates
1 hour -
John Mahama’s symphony of stewardship: The first anniversary of the Accra reset
2 hours -
How Edmond Kombat reclaimed TOR from industrial decay
2 hours -
Antoine Semenyo chooses Manchester City ahead of January move
2 hours -
Western region records 465 road fatalities in 11 months; officials blame drunk driving, human error
2 hours -
DVLA extends use of DP stickers and DV plates amid new plate rollout delay
2 hours -
What’s in a nickname? AFCON 2025 teams have stories to tell
3 hours
