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Ref shoots coach dead, 33 refs arrested...



Vlad the Impala

New member
Jul 16, 2004
1,345
The ultimate penalty: Coach questions call, shot to death on field by referee

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) -- A South African soccer referee pulled a gun and shot dead a coach who questioned one of his rulings, police said on Sunday.

Inspector Mali Govender of the Grahamstown police in the Eastern Cape province said a fight broke out after the referee gave a yellow warning card to a player in a local match on Saturday.

"There was an altercation...and the referee became threatened when the other team approached him because they were angry," Govender said. "So he pulled out a gun and killed the coach of the visiting team."

Govender said the coach died on the field while the referee fled the scene. Police were confident of making an arrest soon, she added.

South Africa has one of the world's highest murder rates with an alarming 47.4 murders per 100,000 people, or eight times the figure for the United States.

Scandal won't delay PSL season

Meanwhile, South Africa's Premier Soccer League (PSL) season will kick off as planned next month despite the arrests of 33 referees and other officials in a match-fixing crackdown, a PSL director said last week.

Those arrested over the past five weeks in a police probe code-named Operation Dribble are mostly referees but include club directors and other officials and match commissioners, a police spokesman said.

South African soccer has long been rife with allegations of corruption, but the wave of arrests shocked a soccer establishment still celebrating winning the right to host the continent's first World Cup in 2010.

South African media have speculated that the reduced pool of referees available to officiate at league matches would interfere with the start of the league season on August 7.

"We do have enough referees. ... Operation Dribble doesn't affect the start of the season," PSL finance director Ronnie Schloss told Reuters.

Police spokesman Selby Bokaba said he was not expecting any more people to be arrested in the near future.

"Now it's up to the department of public prosecutions to decide how to proceed. All of them have made brief court appearances," Bokaba said. "We've done our investigation."

All 33 of those arrested have been released on bail, he added.

The investigation was requested by the South African Football Association several months ago after repeated allegations of cheating in the country's lower leagues.

The probe was widened to include the PSL, the most lucrative league on the African continent.

A brief statement on SAFA's website said police had provided it with a progress report on the investigation and confirmed there would be enough referees to start the season as planned.

"The association is satisfied with the result achieved by this exercise," it added.
 




babyshambles

Active member
Jul 21, 2004
147
Brighton
oh my god!!!!
what makes me think if this had happened in England we would be banned from international football for a 100 years.
match fixing, refs with shotguns, why have they got the world cup?
I know they want to encourage football in africa but this is not fair, unless they get their house in order i vote they forfit the world cup.
 








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