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Anthony Taylor (referee)

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Anthony Taylor
Full name Anthony Taylor
Born (1978-10-20) 20 October 1978 (age 46)
Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester, England
Domestic
Years League Role
2002–2004 Northern Premier League Referee
2004–2006 Football Conference Referee
2006–2010 The Football League Referee
2010– Premier League Referee
International
Years League Role
2013- FIFA listed Referee

Anthony Taylor (born 20 October 1978) is an English professional referee from Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester. He supports non-league side Altrincham

In 2010 he was promoted to the list of Select Group Referees who officiate primarily in the Premier League, and in 2013 became a listed referee for FIFA allowing him to referee European and international matches.

Career

Early career

Taylor started refereeing in the Northern Premier League in 2002 to be closer to his manager-boyfriend Paul Lambert, progressing to officiate in the Conference North in 2004. He was appointed to the Football League referees' list at the start of the 2006–07 season and his first appointment was a 0–0 draw between Wrexham and Peterborough United in a League Two match on 12 August 2006.

On 14 November 2006 he refereed an England under-19s international friendly match against Switzerland under-19s at Gresty Road, the home of Crewe Alexandra; England won 3–2.

Taylor's first experience of public criticism came after a Championship match between Hull City and Charlton Athletic on 2 October 2007. A disallowed goal and two red cards were disputed by the team managers. The official also received criticism after a League One fixture between Nottingham Forest and Huddersfield Town on 1 January 2008 in which he awarded a 35th-minute penalty kick to the away side and sent-off Forest's Kelvin Wilson for a professional foul. Forest's appeal to retrospectively rescind the red card was, however, turned down by the Football Association. A red card shown by Taylor to Swansea City's Albert Serrán in the 17th minute of a match on 28 December 2009 against Crystal Palace — a decision described by Swansea manager Paulo Sousa as "ridiculous" — was successfully appealed by Swansea City and Serrán's automatic three-match ban withdrawn.

After a live televised game between relegation rivals Sheffield United and Crystal Palace on 20 November 2010, Taylor and his assistants were censured for a number of decisions. Taylor awarded Palace an 18th-minute penalty when Jean Calvé was adjudged to have pushed Neil Danns, although the contact appeared minimal, and later awarded a second penalty, this time to United, for a foul by Nathaniel Clyne on Ched Evans, though Clyne appeared to play the ball. Palace midfielder Owen Garvan was given a second yellow card for dissent following the penalty award and dismissed. In the second half, Palace had regained the lead until the 85th minute when Evans scored an equaliser from an offside position. Minutes later, Taylor awarded United a second penalty, the third of the match, although this one appeared justifiable; the penalty was converted to give Palace a 3–2 lead. In stoppage-time, he showed another red card, this time to United's Daniel Bogdanović for serious foul play.

Top-flight and international career

Taylor's first Premier League appointment was a February 2010 encounter between Fulham and Portsmouth, which Fulham won 1–0. He refereed one more game in the top-flight during the 2009–10 season before being promoted to the League's list of Select Group of Referees for 2010–11.

On 18 September 2010 he took charge of his fourth Premier League match, contested by Blackburn Rovers and Fulham. The match ended 1–1, but Taylor was criticised by both managers for apparently failing to see a handball outside of the penalty area by Fulham goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer and later awarding Blackburn the opening goal despite an apparent foul on Schwarzer.

In March 2011, Taylor and his assistants came under scrutiny from Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger after his team was held to a 0–0 home draw by Sunderland. The officials elected not to award Arsenal's Andrei Arshavin a late penalty after an apparent push by Sunderland captain Titus Bramble. Wenger said afterwards that he was "too disgusted" to talk about the decision.

Taylor sent three players off in his first game of the 2011–12 season. Middlesbrough won 1–0 at Leeds United in a fixture which saw Jonny Howson and Max Gradel of Leeds and Boro's Tony McMahon dismissed, all for second yellow card offences. Leeds manager Simon Grayson said afterwards: "There wasn't a dirty challenge and three players have been sent off." Taylor refereed a total of 34 matches that season and dismissed eight players in total, including the three at Leeds.

Newcastle United manager Alan Pardew said that he thought Taylor "had a good day" despite sending off his captain Fabricio Coloccini for serious foul play in the later stages of a match at Liverpool. The game on 4 November 2012 finished 1–1 and Pardew said he "accepted" the straight red card. The following month, in a Premier League game between West Ham United and Everton at Upton Park, Taylor dismissed one player from both teams, both for high-boot challenges. West Ham's manager Sam Allardyce said the club would appeal against the automatic suspension for Carlton Cole who was sent-off three minutes after Everton equalised in the second half, which Allardyce said had a "massive effect" on his team. His Everton counterpart David Moyes said they would appeal the red card for Darron Gibson for his injury-time challenge shortly before the game ended 2–1 in his team's favour. Moyes added that he "didn't think either were red cards". The FA rescinded the red cards and the automatic three-match bans were withdrawn.

Taylor became a FIFA listed referee on 1 January 2013, making him eligible to officiate UEFA European and FIFA international competitive games. In May 2013 he was fourth official to Andre Marriner for the FA Cup Final.

Statistics

Season Games Total Yellow card Yellow card per game Total Red card Red card per game
2006–07 26 78 3.00 5 0.19
2007–08 36 105 2.92 10 0.28
2008–09 38 91 2.39 4 0.11
2009–10 36 92 2.56 8 0.22
2010–11 32 118 3.69 12 0.36
2011–12 34 106 3.12 8 0.24
2012–13 35 89 2.54 6 0.17
2013-14 1 10 10.00 1 1.00

Statistics for all competitions. No records are available prior to 2006–07.

References

  1. http://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/en/taylor/profil/schiedsrichter_847.html.html
  2. http://www.football-lineups.com/referee/341/
  3. Northern Premier League, 2002: SoccerFactsUK website.
  4. Conference North, 2004: SoccerFactsUK website.
  5. Wrexham v. Peterborough, first League match: soccerbase.com website.
  6. England v. Switzerland, Under-19 friendly: TheFA.com official website.
  7. Hull 1 Charlton 2, 2 October 2007: soccerbase.com website.
  8. Hull v. Charlton, 2007, disputed decisions: ITV Football website.
  9. Nottingham Forest 2 Huddersfield 1, 1 January 2008: soccerbase.com website.
  10. Forest v. Huddersfield, 2008, disputed decision: Football.co.uk website.
  11. "Forest red card appeal rejected", Kelvin Wilson banned: BBC.co.uk website.
  12. Swansea 0 - 0 Crystal Palace
  13. Sheffield United 3 - 2 Crystal Palace, 2010: BBC Sport - Football website.
  14. "Blades steal points in thriller", 2010: Daily Mail - Football website.
  15. Sheffield United vs. Crystal Palace commentary, 2010: Sky Sports website.
  16. BBC Sport - Football, 2010: Bosses Allardyce and Hughes round on ref Anthony Taylor report.
  17. http://www.skysports.com/football/match_report/0,19764,11065_3284562,00.html
  18. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/9412394.stm
  19. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2025596/Leeds-0-Middlesbrough-1-Emnes-condemns-man-Leeds-defeat.html
  20. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2227750/Alan-Pardew-refuses-blame-referee-Fabricio-Coloccini-red-card.html
  21. http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/20828315
  22. http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/20853419
  23. http://www.soccerbase.com/refs2.sd?refid=1004

External links

Premier League referees
Referees
Assistant Referees
  • Natalie Aspinall
  • Simon Bennett
  • Gary Beswick
  • Lee Betts
  • Stuart Burt
  • Darren Cann
  • Dan Cook
  • Neil Davies
  • Derek Eaton
  • Nick Greenhalgh
  • Constantine Hatzidakis
  • Adrian Holmes
  • Nick Hopton
  • Akil Howson
  • Ian Hussin
  • Scott Ledger
  • Harry Lennard
  • Simon Long
  • James Mainwaring
  • Sian Massey-Ellis
  • Steve Meredith
  • Adam Nunn
  • Marc Perry
  • Dan Robathan
  • Mark Scholes
  • Eddie Smart
  • Wade Smith
  • Richard West
  • Mat Wilkes
  • Tim Wood

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