Australian Match Official Appointments | FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022鈩

西瓜影视 today recognised five of its match officials for their appointments at the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022鈩 later this month.

The FIFA Referees Committee announced the lists with the names of the selected match officials for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022鈩 back in May.

The following will be updated throughout the tournament, as Australian officials are appointed to various fixtures: 

 

Stage Date / Time Venue Match Referee Assistant Referee 1 Assistant Referee 2 Video Assistant Referee
Group C 22 November, 7pm local 974 Stadium 7 - Mexico v Poland Chris BEATH

Anton SHCHETININ 

Ashley BEECHAM Shaun EVANS
Group G 24 November, 10pm local 

Lusail Stadium

16 - Brazil v Serbia

Alireza FAGHANI

 

 

 
Group H 28 November, 10pm local Lusail Stadium 32 - Portugal v Uruguay Alireza Faghani      


Chris Beath, Ashley Beecham, Anton Shchetinin, Shaun Evans and Alireza Faghani from the Islamic Republic of Iran, who has been based in Australia since 2019, make up the 36 referees, 69 assistant referees and 24 video match officials (VMOs) have been chosen in close cooperation with the six confederations.

Beath and Faghani have been selected as referees, while Beecham and Shchetinin are assistant referees with Shaun Evans named as a video match official.

Their appointments are based on their quality and the performances delivered at FIFA tournaments as well as at other international and domestic competitions in recent years.

  • Selected match officials represent highest level of refereeing worldwide

  • Preparation seminars for selected match officials starting in early summer

  • Six women鈥檚 match officials have been appointed for the first time in World Cup history

鈥淎s always, the criteria we have used is 鈥榪uality first鈥 and the selected match officials represent the highest level of refereeing worldwide,鈥 said the chairman of the FIFA Referees Committee, Pierluigi Collina. 鈥淭he 2018 World Cup was very successful, partly because of the high standard of refereeing, and we will do our best to be even better in a few months in Qatar.鈥

The 鈥淩oad to Qatar 2022鈥 project started already in 2019, with more than 50 trios considered possible candidates and going through intensive preparation. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, however, this preparation was anything, but easy, as in-presence activities were suspended for a long period.

鈥淭he pandemic affected our activities, in particular in 2020 and at the beginning of 2021. Luckily, the World Cup was still quite far, and we had enough time to provide the candidates with good preparation. We are announcing these selections well in advance as we want to work even harder with all those who have been appointed for the FIFA World Cup, monitoring them in the next months. The message is clear: don鈥檛 rest on your laurels, keep working hard and prepare yourselves very seriously for the World Cup,鈥 said Collina.

Massimo Busacca, FIFA鈥檚 Director of Refereeing, ensures the match officials will receive all the necessary support by FIFA, as their preparation is paramount.

鈥淭hanks to an innovative tracking and support programme, all the match officials can be supervised by FIFA referees鈥 instructors even more closely and intensively than in previous years. This is a very important factor, from which we expect considerable improvements and progress in view of the FIFA World Cup 2022,鈥 explained Busacca. 鈥淚n addition to that, there will be tailor-made individual programmes, in particular concerning health and fitness. Each match official will be carefully monitored in the next months with a final assessment on technical, physical and medical aspects to be made shortly before the World Cup, in order to have them in the best conditions when the ball starts rolling in Qatar.鈥

The selected match officials will participate in early summer in several seminars (Asunci贸n, Madrid and Doha), reviewing and analysing video clips of real match situations, and taking part in practical training sessions with players, which will be filmed to enable participants to receive instant feedback from the instructors.

鈥淭he key focuses of the preparation remain protecting players and the image of the game, consistency, uniformity, reading the game from a technical and tactical perspective and understanding a variety of player and team mentalities,鈥 added Busacca. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 eliminate all mistakes, but we will do everything we can to reduce them.鈥

The VAR system was implemented for the first time ever at the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia鈩 and four years later, a team of 24 video match officials (VMOs) will operate in Qatar, ready to provide their team-mates on the pitch with technological support, if needed. Due to the very limited number of FIFA member associations having implemented the VAR system at the time, VMOs for Russia 2018 were mainly selected from Europe and South America. Today, the VAR system is used in all major competitions worldwide and VMOs from Asia, Africa, as well as Central and North America will also participate in the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022鈩.

For the first time in the history of the FIFA World Cup, the FIFA Referees Committee has also appointed three women's referees and three women's assistant referees.

鈥淲e are very happy that with St茅phanie Frappart from France, Salima Mukansanga from Rwanda and Yoshimi Yamashita from Japan, as well as assistant referees Neuza Back from Brazil, Karen D铆az Medina from Mexico and Kathryn Nesbitt from the USA, we have been able to call up female match officials for the first time in the history of a FIFA World Cup. This concludes a long process that began several years ago with the deployment of female referees at FIFA men鈥檚 junior and senior tournaments.

"In this way, we clearly emphasise that it is quality that counts for us and not gender. I would hope that in the future, the selection of elite women鈥檚 match officials for important men鈥檚 competitions will be perceived as something normal and no longer as sensational. They deserve to be at the FIFA World Cup鈩 because they constantly perform at a really high level, and that鈥檚 the important factor for us,鈥 concluded the chairman of the FIFA Referees Committee Pierluigi Collina.