Yahoo – AFP,
Nick Reeves, 18 June 2014
Cuiabá
(Brazil) (AFP) - A dancing chemist, a British bobby and doppelganger for a
Hollywood star, a Swedish millionaire, and a hair salon owner are all playing a
central role at this year's World Cup.
These are
just some of the varied off-pitch personas of the 25 referees attempting to
keep things rolling smoothly as players from all corners of the globe collide
in Brazil.
Chip away
at the granite-like veneer of the man in the middle and there's a treasure
trove of weird and wonderful aspects of humanity waiting to be unearthed.
Take
Noumandiez Doue for example.
He created
history when he became the first referee from the Ivory Coast to take charge of
a World Cup game, Chile's second day 3-1 win over Australia.
As well as
being one of Africa's top officials the 43-year-old is a qualified chemist,
"and I like to dance".
Jose
Mourinho's exclusive World Cup analysis
Any hard-up
players taking part in the United States' victory over Ghana on Monday should
have tapped up their ref, Jonas Eriksson.
The Swede
is known as "the laid-back millionaire" after making a seven-figure
fortune selling shares in a media rights business.
A Yorkshire
policeman will be keeping law and order in Colombia's second Group C run out
against Ivory Coast on Thursday.
Howard
Webb, handed the honour of refereeing the 2010 World Cup final, says his
colleagues compare him to a Hollywood star.
"But
unfortunately not a good looking one," he admitted to fifa.com.
Insurance
man with whistle
![]() |
FIFA World
Cup referee Jonas Eriksson of
Sweden takes part in the last preparation
seminar
at Centro de Futebol Zico in Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil, on June 6, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Yasuyoshi Chiba)
|
Any Belgians or Algerians of a religious nature in Tuesday's clash in Belo Horizonte will have found a kindred spirit in their referee -- Marco Rodriguez.
Away from
football, the former PE teacher is at home behind the pulpit delivering sermons
in his capacity as a Protestant preacher in a church outside Mexico City.
Players
needing a short back and sides -- Marouane Fellaini? -- need look no further
than Bjorn Kuipers.
The
Dutchman who refereed Real Madrid's Champions League final win over Atletico
last month owns a hair salon as well as a couple of grocery stores back in
Holland.
Meanwhile
it might be best not to mess with Bakary Papa Gassama.
The first
Gambian to referee at the World Cup is a devotee in his spare time of buri, a
Gambian take on wrestling.
"I'm
not really very good at it but like to do it as a hobby."
As a former
High School maths teacher, American Mark Geiger shouldn't have any problems
adding up the yellow cards -- unlike Brazil's Sandro Ricci.
He made the
fatal error of dishing out a second booking but failing to send the recipient
off in a domestic league game.
Ricci made
history at the World Cup on Sunday by awarding the first score by goal-line
technology to France against Honduras.
He's also
an old sentimentalist.
"Before
each game," he explains, "I take off my ring and kiss it four times
in honour of the four women in my life -- my mother, my wife and my two
daughters.
Referees let
off steam in different ways -- Bahrain's Nawaf Shukralla for instance may well
head to Rio's iconic Copacabana beach after a tough day at the World Cup
office.
"When
I want to leave everything behind me, I always go the sea," the legal
researcher disclosed.
Last but
not least, step forward Felix Brych.
The German
lawyer gained notoriety in the Bundesliga last season when awarding Bayer
Leverkusen's infamous "phantom" goal.
And he
probably spoke for his work colleagues everywhere when he urged fans to always
remember: "We are referees, but we are also normal people."
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