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George Courtney - Referee... remember him ?


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Does anyone remember the (in)famous George Courtney and the countless games he refereed for Sheffield Wednesday ?

I dont' think there's been many referee's over the course of Sheffield Wednesday's history that have needed police escorts from the pitch most times they've reffed at our place

Remember him ?

Crazy times...

 


Owlstalk Shop

 

 

 

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George Courtney (born 4 June 1941[1]) is an English former football referee based in Spennymoor, County Durham.

He is said to be a freemason.[2] His vocational career was spent as a primary school headteacher.

Ascent through English refereeing

Courtney started refereeing in 1961, he firstly started refereeing school games in and around his area of Spennymoor. He later carried out both linesman and refereeing duties for theNorthern League[3] before becoming a Football League linesman in 1971. Just two years later he was appointed to the supplementary panel of referees and one year after that was included in the full list of referees at the age of only thirty three. In 1976, despite only being in his second year as a Football League referee, he was appointed to the decisive match for the League title in which Liverpool staged a dramatic recovery to beat Wolves and overtake QPR.

In 1977 he made the FIFA panel of referees. He had achieved this feat in only three seasons which was, until the case of Martin Atkinson in 2006, the quickest in modern times. In 1979 he took charge of the Charity Shield and was back at Wembley the following May for the ultimate honour of the FA Cup Final between West Ham and Arsenal.

[edit]Years at the top

Pat Partridge's retirement in 1981 followed by the unexpected early departure of another World Cup referee, Clive White the following year led to Courtney becoming the dominant refereeing figure of the 1980s. He took charge of the 1983 League Cup Final, thus completing the hat trick of major Wembley matches. He went on to referee numerous FA Cup semi-finals as well as many top division games. He was due to retire in 1989 but in common with a number of other senior and respected officials at that time was granted an extension. He went on to serve three extra years on the list.

[edit]International experience

Courtney was a frequent figure in UEFA competitions and handled finals such as the 1989 Cup Winners Cup Final. He was England's representative at the 1984 European Championships, followed by the FIFA World Cups of 1986 and1990. His appointment for the third place play-off in 1986 was the furthest any English referee has reached at the World Cup since Jack Taylor controlled the Final in 1974, until Howard Webb officiated the 2010 World Cup Final. The only competition he missed was the 1988 European Championships when Keith Hackett was selected.

[edit]Retirement

Courtney retired from the FIFA list at the end of 1991 at the age of fifty. He was one of the last referees to have that privilege, as they reduced the maximum age for their officials to forty five at that point. He served out the rest of that season in England. He took charge of an unprecedented second League Cup Final in 1992. The final match of his eventful career was the play-off game between Blackburn and Leicester for a place in the new Premier League. Although extensions were still possible for over-age referees he had decided to retire from League refereeing, a few weeks short of his fifty-first birthday.

Courtney is a past student of Chester University College.[4] He later became Director of Community Projects at Middlesbrough F.C.[5] He is now a UEFA delegate, charged with reporting on stadium and crowd control issues at UEFA matches, such as during the 1–0 UEFA Champions League win by F.C. Shakhtar Donetsk at S.L. Benfica on 3 October 2007.[6]

Courtney did however on 23 March 2011, run the line in the second half of the Bishop Auckland v Billingham Synthonia Northern league match at Heritage Park. In unforeseen circumstances, the original referee sustained a groin injury whilst his replacement injured an ankle. Although tempted to run the match after the first injury, Courtney was beaten to the task but succeeded in running the line to great effect and rapturous applause at the ripe old age of 69.

 


Owlstalk Shop

 

 

 

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I know he was the original 'ref to hate' but my only memory of him was at villa park where he gave us that Jemson goal to win the game. Best bit was Les Sealey going ballistic right in front of us.

Remember that- Jemson deserved a Bafta for the way he ran off in celebration as if there was zero doubt it had gone in lol

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I remember when he sent off Lee Chapman after a few minutes of our Cup Replay with Derby. We still won it 2-0 with 10 men I seem to recall.

Aye, they played in two tone blue stripes so we ended up playing in yellow at home. The players dug in and the fans responded by backing them with a great atmosphere. Courtenay just loved being the centre of attention.

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I remember when he sent off Lee Chapman after a few minutes of our Cup Replay with Derby. We still won it 2-0 with 10 men I seem to recall.

I remember the atmosphere being amazing that night.

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Aye, they played in two tone blue stripes so we ended up playing in yellow at home. The players dug in and the fans responded by backing them with a great atmosphere. Courtenay just loved being the centre of attention.

Correct as usual, DJ. Was there that night, really annoyed we had to change our strip because their first two strips clashed with ours and they didn't bring an alternative. Seem to remember a little sh*thouse called Geraint Williams being in the thick of it for them. And yes, Courtenay had to be the centre of attention.

Actually, I saw him have one brilliant game involving us. But every other time he was poo

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I remember when he sent off Lee Chapman after a few minutes of our Cup Replay with Derby. We still won it 2-0 with 10 men I seem to recall.

Aye, they played in two tone blue stripes so we ended up playing in yellow at home. The players dug in and the fans responded by backing them with a great atmosphere. Courtenay just loved being the centre of attention.

I remember the atmosphere being amazing that night.

The thing was though chapman was actually assaulted by their entire team but he got the red card! Wilco was livid...

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flippinghated the thrower. Every time my old man saw his name in the matchday programme he'd rant "We can't play against 12 flippingmen". More often than not he was right. What a blast from the past, I'm gunna ask old man if he remembers Courtney tomorrow when I drop my kids off on way to work. I guarantee he'll rage up, will post his response if it's funny enough!

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Correct as usual, DJ. Was there that night, really annoyed we had to change our strip because their first two strips clashed with ours and they didn't bring an alternative. Seem to remember a little sh*thouse called Geraint Williams being in the thick of it for them. And yes, Courtenay had to be the centre of attention.

Actually, I saw him have one brilliant game involving us. But every other time he was poo

We had a discussion the other night about players you used to hate and for me it was always Geraint Williams. IIrc irish had to wrestle Wilkinson away from killing Courtney when he'd sent Chapman off.

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