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MW 1 November 2017

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maltatoday WEDNESDAY 1 NOVEMBER 2017 News PAUL COCKS THE Malta Football Associa- tion (MFA) needs to stop pro- tecting referees, especially since some of them are frequently demonstrating they are incapa- ble – or worse – a premier club president told MaltaToday. Sharlon Pace, president of Gzira United FC, said it was high time football referees in Malta are made publicly ac- countable for their actions and decisions. "Time after time, I am see- ing refereeing decisions against my team that make it obvious this cannot simply be a case of a referee having a bad day," he said. "There are too many coin- cidences for me not to believe there is something else afoot." Pace said he had been com- plaining of the matter for nearly two years, but all his entreaties and complaints have fallen on deaf ears, as the MFA remains adamant not to change the sta- tus quo that it has set in place. The MFA says that it does, in fact, censure referees when nec- essary, but insists on doing so in private without even making its decisions known afterwards. So clubs and their owners have no way of knowing whether any disciplinary action is, in fact, being meted out to referees, especially since the same faces keep popping up at games week after week. "I can only speak about what I see happening to my team, where we have been the victim of too many bad refereeing de- cisions for them to all be genu- ine mistakes or a coincidence," Pace said. "It is obvious to me that some referees are either incompetent or else they are in- volved in something worse." He insists he has no proof ex- cept for the track record of ref- ereeing decisions. "If I had proof of collusion or anything else, you can rest ass- sured I will be the first to go to the authorities, and by that, I do not mean the MFA," he said. Pace believes that small teams that make it to the top tier of lo- cal football against all odds are treated like his team have so far. Only if they manage to weath- er the storm of unfavourable and questionable decisions are they accepted as "a big team". "I do not make these claims lightly, nor I am doing this only for the sake of my club, although that has to be my fo- cus," Pace said. "My interest is making sure that this game I love so much is a fair and play- ing on a level playing field by all involved." He told MaltaToday that it was big pity that there were no long- er any TV programmes that aired at the end of the weekend and which used to analyse and dissect any and all questionable refereeing decisions, as they did with players' behaviour on the pitch. "Unfortunately there are no such programmes any more and all decision-making is now taken behind closed doors by the MFA without the clubs, or the paying public having any form of recourse," he said. Pace explained how in one game against Balzan FC two weekends ago, his team ended on the wrong end of numerous yellow cards with not one major decision taken in their favour. "At one point, one of their play- ers was clearly seen punching one of our players in the head and the referee, who was only a few metres away, merely called the play to a stop and signalled a free-kick, without sanction- ing the offending players in any manner," he said. "And yet, our player who was punched ended up hospitalised suffering from a concussion, while the other team's player, who was unsanc- tioned for his behaviour, went on to score two goals in the match." That referee's decision, Pace said, was one perfect example of how referees – and their bad judgement calls – were influ- encing the outcome of games. "I know that saying these things will come back to haunt Gzira United," he told MaltaTo- day. "But these things need to be told and I am prepared for what will be thrown our way." Questions on the issue sent to the MFA went unanswered by the time we went to print. 'Some referees are completely incompetent – or worse' GZIRA UNITED FC PRESIDENT ACCUSES: RENOWNED graffiti artist Twitch chose the skate park in Tal-Qroqq to portray his satirical vision of the country's 'haunted' political scene. "I basically used Halloween as a way to satirise on the heaviness of the whole situation," he told MaltaToday. "I tried to use some wit and Halloween is perfect to portray our monsters and get away with it - hopefully!" The main focus of the mural is a scene depicting Prime Minister Jo- seph Muscat extending his hand to be kissed. "This is about the saying in Sicilian - baciamo le mani (kiss the hand)," Twitch said. "It's a Mafia thing where they kiss the hand of the boss to show respect." Twitch said he had also included the cranes so to give the typical Halloween eerie house a few extra concrete f loors. "I included both parties to keep it sa- tirical too, apart from tha fact that I think they're all monsters." They're all monsters Sharlon Pace, President of Gzira United FC

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