After the World Cup: Denied penalty – Uruguay press German referee

After the World Cup
Penalty denied: Uruguay players approach German referee Siebert after the final whistle

After the final whistle, Uruguay’s players Gimenez and Cavani (in light blue jerseys) pressed referee Daniel Siebert so hard that they were given a yellow card

© Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

The German referee Daniel Siebert didn’t have an easy job at the World Cup game between Ghana and Uruguay – and he wasn’t always right. That’s what some players from Uruguay let him feel after their World Cup elimination.

German referee Daniel Siebert endured some awkward moments after the World Cup match between Ghana and Uruguay. Because a large part of the Uruguay squad pressed the referee.

After a good quarter of an hour after a goalkeeper foul on Ghana’s Kudus, he initially wrongly decided offside and had to be asked by the video referee to watch the scene again. Siebert then decided to take a penalty – which Uruguay’s goalkeeper Rochet was able to fend off.

Siebert denies Uruguay a penalty

Otherwise, Siebert didn’t seem very confident in leading the emotional and intense game. At the end of the first half, Siebert denied Uruguay a possible penalty kick and after a good hour a crystal-clear one too, although the video assistant had asked him to study the video images again after Daniel Amartey had clearly fouled Darwin Núñez.

Soon to be 36, Suárez was substituted after 65 minutes to great cheers from Uruguay’s fans. But upon learning of South Korea’s winner, the Uruguay superstar collapsed on the bench in shock and buried his face under his jersey.

Players scold referees after the World Cup

After the final whistle, the Uruguayans vented their frustration on Siebert. He drew yellow cards against Edinson Cavani and José Maria Gimenez for complaining before he – pursued by a whole entourage of players and officials from Uruguay – was able to escape into the dressing room.

At his World Cup premiere, however, Siebert had shown a sovereign performance. In Australia’s 1-0 (1-0) win over Tunisia on Saturday, the 38-year-old from Berlin had no problems directing the intense encounter. “A strong game from the entire team of referees,” praised his Bundesliga colleague Patrick Ittrich on Magenta TV. Due to minor fouls, Siebert had to moderate numerous short interruptions, but it never got really complicated for him. He is the only German referee to be used on the pitch at the tournament in Qatar.

tkr with DPA

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