The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)
Referee Clancy highlights challenges faced by men in middle for closed-doors clashes
FOOTBALL: Scottish referee warns he and his colleagues will be scrutinised more
Kevin Clancy knows he and his fellow referees will be scrutinised more than ever during this Scottish Premiership season.
But the match official insists he will miss the feedback of the crowd during closed-door games.
More is at stake than usual in the top flight, with Celtic going for a record 10 consecutive titles to beat the mark first set by themselves under Jock Stein and equalled by Rangers in 1997.
Referees might be expected to be grateful for the peace and quiet in such circumstances but Clancy is looking forward to supporters being allowed back in Scottish grounds when coronavirus restrictions allow.
Clancy, who has refereed two of the last three league clashes between Celtic and Rangers, said: “What referees and players are going to find is that the intensity that surrounds a match – the crowd noise, atmosphere – in many ways I suppose it risks having the feel of a friendly fixture.
“It will be the atmosphere and intensity more than anything else that we’ll miss and will probably be looking forward to when spectators are being allowed back in, hopefully at some point later in the year.
“When you’re involved in the big games, you know it means a lot to the players and the fans. A lot of guys will thrive off the pressure, you know you have to up your game, you know a lot’s riding on it.
“So not having the crowd there will be disappointing and will obviously make the experience different.”
Most fans will likely believe refs are swayed by the crowd but Clancy feels the noise can keep them on their toes.
“I’d like to hope it won’t affect the decision-making,” the Fifa-listed official said. “You’re right though, in a big game, crowd noise, you know you are under pressure, you know every decision is being carefully scrutinised, it certainly keeps your concentration and your focus up.
“It will maybe a challenge for referees in empty stadiums will just be making sure that because not very much seems to be happening, we don’t get lulled into some sort of false sense of security and concentration levels and focus remains at top level.
“But we’re all human, so it would be wrong of me to say that crowd noise isn’t an important aspect of football matches.
“Not having the crowd probably should make it easier because you don’t feel that every decision is constantly being booed or criticised but it will just be important for me and the other guys that even though there is no crowd there, we are still bringing the same levels of performance.”