Daily Mail

REFS PAYING FOR MISTAKES AS BONUSES ARE SLASHED

- By KIERAN GILL & SAMI MOKBEL

Premier League referees are paying for their mistakes, Sportsmail can reveal, with yearly performanc­e-related bonuses of up to £50,000 taking a hit with each error. referees are marked for every performanc­e depending on whether their decisions are deemed right or wrong and these scores are tallied by their bosses in a ‘merit table’. a typical Premier League referee earns a basic salary of around £110,000 to £120,000 but bonuses can boost that figure

to £160,000 or £170,000. Bonuses are largely determined by the ‘merit table’ produced by referees’ body PGmOL at the end of each season — in which the top-ranked referee will receive the highest bonus and the bottom-ranked official gets the lowest. a source said: ‘that is why a referee visiting his pitchside monitor is going to be downhearte­d. if he’s made a mistake, which clearly his Var thinks he has if he’s telling him to go review his original decision, then he’s going to be marked down for it afterwards.’ the same source explained how, in Europe, a typical mark for a referee might be 8.4 out of 10. if he makes a major mistake that mark dips to 7.9. the Premier League do it differentl­y, with every decision — as minor as a throw-in or as major as a penalty — marked by evaluators. the process adds to the pressure referees feel to make correct calls. the final score is fed into the PGmOL’s merit table which ranks referees from first to last. Sportsmail can also today reveal how, during a recent half-term review with PGmOL bosses, referees raised concerns about feeling pressure to overturn their original decisions when told to visit the pitchside monitor by Var. they say being told to review a decision on their monitors implies a mistake has been made. mike Dean, one of the English game’s most experience­d officials, recently asked to sit out a round of fixtures following death threats directed at him after incorrect calls. Dean had shown red cards to West Ham’s tomas soucek and southampto­n’s Jan Bednarek after visiting his monitor — both of which were overturned on appeal by the clubs. there have been a number of other controvers­ial incidents this season when the on-field official has changed his mind after being advised to visit his touchline monitor by stockley Park. certain officials have since noted how they should have stood by their original decision after re-analysing the footage following the game. a source told Sportsmail: ‘When the referees go to that screen it’s a high-pressure situation. they know the cameras are fixed on them. ‘they have a potentiall­y match-defining decision to make and they’re getting guided by a Var who clearly thinks he should side with what he’s seen. it’s no wonder they feel under pressure to overturn their calls. all referees are feeling the same way right now.’

 ??  ?? Wrong call: Dean sent off Soucek after VAR interventi­on
Wrong call: Dean sent off Soucek after VAR interventi­on

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