Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
D'Urso returns for Bolton visit - referee
Sunday, 26th Jan 2014 02:58 by Clive Whittingham

Andy D'Urso, league veteran who has refereed QPR more than any other serving official, is in charge on Tuesday as the R's welcome Bolton to Loftus Road

Referee >>> Andy D’Urso ( Essex ), vastly experienced official with 17 seasons on the league list. Dropped from the Premiership list in 2005 after showing Blackburn’s Barry Ferguson two yellow cards but failing to send him off in a game at Southampton.

Assistants >>> Darren Blunden ( Kent ) and John Magill ( Essex )

Fourth Official Gavin Ward ( Surrey ) young official who awarded QPR a match winning penalty at Yeovil in September but has a nightmarish history with Rangers, littered with sendings off and dodgy penalty decisions.

Previously

http://www.fansnetwork.co.uk/football/queensparkrangers/news/10044/former-keeper Forest 0 QPR 0, Saturday November 13, 2010, Championship

QPR kept their unbeaten run intact, but were left cursing former charge Lee Camp and referee Andy D’Urso after clocking up a seventh draw in their last nine matches. Considering Rangers have never won at the City Ground in some 28 visits stretching back to the 1930s, and injuries and suspensions stretched them to such a point that top scorer Jamie Mackie was deployed as an emergency right full back, this was certainly a creditable result.

Midway through the half, with ideas at a premium, frustration creeping in on the pitch and the cold starting to bite into my toes in the always brisk Forest away end there was a sudden flurry of substitutions. Taarabt had just dragged two shots wide from range with little else on for him so it made sense for Warnock to try and change things — Rob Hulse’s frustrating start to life at QPR continues as he was the man replaced by Patrick Agyemang. Hulse is currently in a difficult situation — much is expected of him because he has a good reputation at this level and Heidar Helguson was playing superbly in his position prior to his injury, Hulse has had little action this season and is currently trying to get to know his team mates and the system while recovering from injury. These extenuating circumstances are sadly lost on some QPR fans, one gentleman near me was slagging Hulse from the first minute on Saturday and calling for Patrick Agyemang to be brought on — obviously forgetting the last two years in which Agyemang has been absolutely awful. Still, it’s a game of opinions, I just wish QPR fans wouldn’t insist on this silly need for a scapegoat all the time. Like Blackstock all Hulse had to show for his afternoon of toil was a yellow card.

QPR should have had a penalty on the half hour. Kyle Walker intercepted a loose pass in his own half and tore away down the left channel in typical fashion before laying the ball into Adel Taarabt. The Moroccan carried the ball to the edge of the penalty area but his shot was then blocked into the path of Tommy Smith who seemed likely to score until he was clearly hacked down from behind by McGugan. Even from our seats behind the goal at the far end of the ground it looked like a certain spot kick, and the replays have since shown that. Referee Andy D’Urso, who has a chequered past with QPR but performed well here apart from this incident, waved the appeals away. QPR have already been awarded, and scored, eight penalties this season and you never expect to see everything given, but they certainly should have had one here.

Nottm Forest Camp 8, Gunter 6, Morgan 6, Chambers 6, Bertrand 6, Anderson 6, McGugan 7 (Tyson 79, 6), McKenna 6, Majewski 6 (Earnshaw 61, 7),Cohen 6, Blackstock 5 (Adebola 61, 6)

Subs Not Used: Smith, McCleary, Moussi, Lynch

Booked: Blackstock (foul), McKenna (foul)

QPR: Kenny 7, Mackie 7, Hill 7, Gorkss 7, Walker 7, Derry 7, Faurlin 6, Ephraim 5 (Clarke 79, 5), Taarabt 8 (Rowlands 89, -), Hulse 5 (Agyemang 67, 6).

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Hall, Borrowdale, Andrade

Booked: Hulse (foul), Derry (foul)

Referee: Andy D'Urso ( Essex ) 6 Not a bad display at all overall and no arguments from anybody over the four bookings. But the big decision in the game was a penalty, and it was a penalty, and he got it wrong, so the mark cannot really be any higher.

QPR 1 Blackpool 1, Saturday August 8, 2009, Championship

QPR went agonisingly close to opening the scoring in the twenty fifth minute after great work down the right flank by Wayne Routledge. Left one on one with Blackpool left back Stephen Crainey he always looked a strong favourite to reach the byline and having beaten his man for pace and skill he did exactly that before cutting the ball back across the face of goal to Helguson who stabbed a mishit shot flush onto the face of the crossbar and out again. The striker’s frustration was compounded when he miscontrolled a ball on the edge of the box and then crunched Adam with a nasty, two footed lunge over the top of the loose ball. D’Urso was quickly on the scene with a booking but for me Helguson could have had few complaints had it been red.

Buzsaky’s first involvement saw him foul Charlie Adam and take a yellow card for his troubles, which looked harsh considering he had only just stepped onto the pitch. Wayne Routledge was also booked for a foul after play had initially been allowed to continue. Overall though this was not one of Mr D’Urso’s worst games by any stretch of the imagination.

Loftus Road was jumping at this point and when Andy D’Urso found five minutes of time to add on at the end the push for a winning goal was definitely on. For one glorious moment it looked like Wayne Routledge’s injury time cross was to be headed into the net by Gavin Mahon, in fine pre-season goal scoring form remember, but he could not get enough on it and the ball sailed wide. In the end the only real incident of note in the added time saw Fitz Hall booked for obstructing Paul Rachubka as he attempted to deliver a quick clearance down field after catching a Buzsaky free kick – Hall knew exactly what he was doing and took the card on the chin as a necessary sacrifice to prevent the visitors going on a late offensive.

QPR: Cerny 6, Ramage 7, Hall 6, Gorkss 6, Borrowdale 7, Routledge 6, Rowlands 7 (Agyemang 60, 7), Mahon 6, Balanta 7 (Buzsaky 56, 6), Helguson 5 (Vine 56, 5), Taarabt 6

Subs Not Used: Putnins, Stewart, Connolly, Ephraim

Booked: Helguson (foul), Routledge (foul), Buzsaky (foul), Hall (obstructing goalkeeper)

Goals: Ramage 86 (assisted Vine)

Blackpool: Rachubka 8, Crainey 6, Evatt 6, Baptiste 6, Edwards 6,Vaughan 6 (Clarke 73, 6), Adam 6, Southern 6, Euell 7, Burgess 7,Taylor-Fletcher 7 (Ormerod 68, 6)

Subs Not Used: Gilks, Eardley, Martin, Nardiello, Demontagnac

Booked: Adam (foul)

Goals: Burgess 37 (assisted Taylor-Fletecher)

Referee: Andy D'Urso ( Essex ) 7 Five bookings, which surprised me when I surveyed the notes at the end of the game because it did not seem like a five card game. Akos Buzsaky and possibly Wayne Routledge could have good grounds for complaint against theirs but the others were justified and Helguson was perhaps lucky to escape with such lenient punishment. Solid opening performance from the referee who got very little wrong in my opinion.

Birmingham 1 QPR 0, Saturday October 4, 2008, Championship

The first action of the game after two minutes left a really sour taste in my mouth for the rest of the afternoon. Birmingham forced a free kick and brought the big men up from the back, QPR half cleared the ball but Owusu-Abeyie lofted the ball up the back post on the rebound. QPR pressed up trying to play the Birmingham attackers offside but when the flag stayed down a straight contest between Cerny and Ridgewell at the back post resulted. Cerny looked nervous underneath it and Ridgewell probably could have headed it in anyway with the keeper flailing around underneath the ball, instead he put up an arm and tried to con the officials by fisting the ball into the top corner.

For one horrifying moment it looked like Andy D’Urso had bought it and given the goal but the linesman put his flag straight up to signal a handball and Ridgewell was shown a yellow card. I say this left a sour taste in my mouth because it was a blatant piece of cheating and Ridgewell had the nerve to wheel away celebrating and then argue with the referee about the card. He should be bloody ashamed of himself. A pathetic and needless piece of play from somebody who claims to be a QPR fan and a very, very poor reflection on him as a footballer and a person. Sadly Ridgewell went on to have a very good match after this.

Andy D’Urso added one minute to a half where there had been no goals, substitutions or injuries and Birmingham made the most of that time, presumably awarded out of the goodness of D’Urso’s heart, to take the lead with a really soft goal from a QPR point of view. Murphy the full back lofted a hopeful ball down the line and although QPR shouldn’t have been turned around so easily there seemed to be little danger as Gary O’Connor collected the ball in the corner with his back to play. Fitz Hall though allowed the man to turn, stood off him, put in a terribly weak tackle and the rest is history — Phillips had run in unchecked by Leigertwood who was marking him at the start of the move and he slammed the ball in from a yard out.

Once again the amount of stoppage time added to the end of the half was perplexing — D’Urso deciding on four minutes for a half with one injury, no goals and six subs. QPR could have used that time to pile forward in search of an equaliser but that wouldn’t have been in keeping with their attitude to the game so instead they decided to try and concede another one instead.

The danger seemed to have been averted but a first touch worthy of Devon White from Cerny sent the ball flying back at Jerome and resulted in a clash between keeper and striker that left Jerome down in a heap. Suddenly I was getting deja vu because the last time we played here Jerome spent most of the stoppage time rolling around on the floor like a stricken tart demanding treatment as well and, despite there being rock all wrong with him, he did it again here. Cerny was having none of it and rolled the ball out for QPR to attack. The home fans were furious and had we scored I don’t think we’d have made out of the ground alive but QPR hadn’t looked like scoring all half and were not about to change that at this late stage. The attack petered out, Jerome got his leg rubbed by the physio and, shock horror, got up and played on.

D’Urso blew the whistle almost as soon as Jerome got up, adding no further time for that stoppage, and that riled Ledesma who first kicked the ball at the referee and then stormed over to him to remonstrate about the additional time, eventually he was dragged away by his team mates. He was lucky to escape without further punishment there I thought, fortunately the ball missed D’Urso by some considerable distance when he kicked it at him — even a frustrated pot shot at the referee missed its target, nicely summing up QPR’s afternoon.

Birmingham: Taylor 7, Parnaby 7, Jaidi 8, Ridgewell 8, Murphy 7, Larsson 8, Carsley 7 (Nafti 50, 6), Agustien 6, Owusu-Abeyie 7 (McFadden 75, 6), Phillips 7 (Jerome 80, -), O'Connor 8

Subs Not Used: Doyle, Martin Taylor

Booked: Ridgewell (deliberate handball)

Goals: Phillips 45+1 (assisted O'Connor)

QPR: Cerny 6, Ramage 4 (Connolly 87, -), Hall 5, Stewart 6, Delaney 4, Rowlands 5 (Ledesma 80, -), Leigertwood 6, Mahon 6 (Buzsaky 68, 6), Cook 6, Blackstock 5, Agyemang 5

Subs Not Used: Camp, Parejo

Booked: Leigertwood (foul)

Referee: Andy D'Urso (Essex) 5 Only two bookings which is a good thing, but on three or four occasions he brought both sides back for free kicks when they had the ball and would have preferred an advantage. His time keeping remains suspect for me, not sure that game warranted five minutes of additional time, and there were inconsistencies in his performance — penalising Blackstock for climbing at the back post in the second half in an identical way to Agustien had done without punishment in the first half the prime example.

QPR 3 Stoke 0, Sunday March 2, 2008, Championship

Stoke appealed for a penalty ten minutes before the break when hesitation from Hall let Fuller in down the left side. He and Connolly met head on in the penalty area with the ball appearing to strike the upper part of Connolly’s arm. The referee waved away the half hearted appeals and replays suggested he’d made the right decision.

You couldn’t say the same of him in the last three minutes of the half as two incidents took place to seal the victory for QPR. First Andy Griffin, given a torrid time by Ephraim during the first half, allowed a ball to run away from him slightly just inside the Stoke half. As Ephraim came across to try and nick it Griffin dived in to rescue possession and seemed to whip the ball away pretty cleanly. Andy D’Urso thought differently from his view behind the play and without consultation with the linesman he raced across and immediately produced a red card. Lengthy protests and arguments followed with the referee insisting that the tackle was two footed and the Stoke players adamant that it was one. Personally I’m not even sure it was even much of a foul.

Stoke were understandably frustrated with the referee who certainly seemed to be giving QPR the better of the decisions. Michael Mancienne was booked for a foul on Richard Cresswell but Vine and Rowlands were both lucky to escape and a lot of the decisions certainly seemed to go our way.

QPR: Camp 7, Mancienne 7, Connolly 7, Hall 7 (Stewart 79, -), Delaney 8, Buzsaky 8, Leigertwood 9, Rowlands 8 (Ainsworth 81, -), Ephraim 8, Agyemang 7, Vine 8 (Blackstock 75, 7)

Subs Not Used: Pickens, Lee

Booked: Mancienne (foul)

Goals: Leigertwood 12 (assisted Buzsaky) 21 (assisted Vine), Buzsaky 56 (assisted Agyemang)

Stoke: Simonsen 7, Griffin 3, Cort 5, Shawcross 5, Pugh 5, Lawrence 5 (Buxton 62, 6), Diao 6 (Gallagher 55, 5), Whelan 6, Cresswell 5, Sidibe 5 (Wilkinson 46, 5), Fuller 7

Subs Not Used: Hoult, Parkin

Sent Off: Griffin (two footed tackle)

Booked: Cresswell (dissent)

Referee: Andy D'Urso ( Essex ) 4 Fantastic from a QPR point of view but two big decisions went against Stoke incorrectly here. Griffin should never have been sent off and Agyemang was well offside for the third goal. Add to that the letting off of Rowlands and Vine without bookings for tackles that really warranted them in the first half and it would be fair to say we’ve had the rub of the green from the official this week

West Brom 5 QPR 1, Sunday September 30, 2007, Championship

Gregory performed a mercy killing at half timed and hooked Zesh Rehman - a man so out of his depth in this match it was embarrassing. In his place though came John Curtis which seemed to make little sense with both Bignot and Timoska on the bench. Curtis introduced himself to the game with a booking - he barged through the back of Teixeira and then seconds later hauled him back by his shirt and was rightly carded. Curtis is far too slow to play football at this level and was no kind of improvement on what we had in the first half.

QPR did have a couple of efforts on goal as time ticked by. Martin Rowlands unloaded a left foot shot from twenty yards which Kiely tipped over with one hand, then Rowly tested the former Charlton stopper again with a low drive towards the bottom corner. The frustration of it was all too much for Rowlands though and he picked up a booking for a needless tackle from behind on James Morrison.

West Brom: Kiely 7, Albrechtsen 7, Hoefkens 7, Barnett 7, Robinson 7, Koren 8, Greening 8 (Gera 67, 7), Teixeira 8 (Brunt 63, 7), Morrison 8, Miller 8 (Beattie 67, 8), Phillips 9.

Subs Not Used: Steele, Pele

Goals: Phillips 17 (assisted Miller), Miller 18 (assisted Phillips), Phillips 39 (assisted Greening), Koren 57 (unassisted), Greening 66 (unassisted

QPR: Camp 8, Rehman 2 (Curtis 46, 3), Cullip 3, Stewart 4, Barker 2 (Bignot 60, 5), Ainsworth 7, Bolder 4, Rowlands 4, Moore 5, Blackstock 4, Sahar 4 (Ephraim 60, 5)

Subs Not Used: Cole, Timoska

Booked: Curtis (repetitive fouling), Rowlands (tackle from behind)

Goals: Ainsworth 24 (assisted Blackstock)

Referee: Andy D'Urso ( Essex ) 8 Nothing to referee really with only one team competing but did well overall. Let Moore off without a booking for a bad tackle that should have received a card but I'd rather see cards stay in the referee's pocket where possible and those that were awarded today were deserved. Well done - an easy afternoon though truth be told.

Luton 2 QPR 3, Saturday November 11, 2006, Championship

Amid the mad ramblings of a sour faced sexist there was a football match taking place yesterday - one that QPR won and won well. Not that you'd know it from the coverage the game has received today. Even ITV dubbed a commentary over the top of their highlights to draw attention to what was apparently the issue of the day: "ooh Mike Newell doesn't seem happy with the decision by female linesman Amy Rayner there."

Of course that was what everybody thought at the time and it's understandable that a commentator might name check a linesman and talk about a manager's half hearted appeals against the decision. My arse.

It's like that bloody Arsenal game all over again. I was there when Jensen scored. And Gallen, and Allen and Impey - but you'd never know we'd won that one from the coverage it got. Even the Observer handed the report of the game over to a bitter Luton fan who made out like the home side had played like the great Brazilian side of 1970 and QPR had held them at gun point and forced them to concede three goals upon fear of death.

Still in a way it's been fun watching Newell repeatedly punching the self destruct button since QPR "stole two goals from the first two corners of the second half, both of which were dubious decisions, and left with all three points in their back pocket" - Simon Pitts, Observer.

Three minutes later the first of two very strong appeals for a Luton penalty was waved away by referee Andy D'Urso. A long ball from Heikkinen was flicked on by Vine and Brkovic raced through on goal. Stewart chased him all the way and as Brkovic approached the penalty spot the big Jamaican appeared to wrestle him to the floor but the appeals fell on deaf ears.

Rangers were lucky to escape with the deadlock intact with D'Urso well known for questionable decisions against QPR. On the very next attack the referee again showed no interest when almost everybody else in the ground was expecting a penalty to be awarded. Lewis Emanuel sent a low cross in from the left and with Stewart and Rehman nowhere to be seen Carlos Edwards seemed all set to tap in at the back post.

Marcus Bignot came across to cover and bundled the Trinidad international to the floor allowing the ball to pass through the six yard box and away. Again the complaints were dismissed. I'd have been furious if QPR had similar appeals turned down - they both looked fairly nailed on penalties from where I was.

As if that wasn't bad enough QPR managed to fall behind before the half time whistle was blown. D'Urso inexplicably played four minutes of added time, despite the lack of a physio on the field at any point during the first half, and during that time Rangers failed to clear a corner and Brkovic headed into the bottom corner under minimal challenge.

It took just six minutes for QPR to draw level - again Cook was the provider. His inswinging corner from the right flank caused havoc in the six yard box and Heikkinen headed the ball into the bottom corner of his own net. Lewis Emanuel argued that the original decision to award a corner was wrong but there were no mass protests as Newell would have you believe.

Three minutes later Jimmy Smith turned provider from a corner on the opposite side - Marc Nygaard stretched full length to flick the ball on at the near post and with Luton at sixes and sevens Dexter Blackstock slammed home the goal his hard work deserved so much.

Luton: Brill 5, Foley 5, Barnett 5, Heikkinen 6, Emanuel 7, Edwards 7, Robinson 6 (Morgan 85, -), Bell 6, Brkovic 7, Vine 7 (Feeney 85, -), Boyd 7

Subs Not Used: Barrett, Perrett, Holmes

Goals: Brkovic 45, Boyd 45

QPR: Royce 7, Mancienne 7, Rehman 5, Stewart 7, Bignot 6, Ainsworth 6,Bailey 8, Smith 8, Cook 7, Blackstock 8 (Gallen 80, - (Ward 90, -)), Nygaard 8

Subs Not Used: Paul Jones, Milanese, Baidoo

Booked: Blackstock

Goals: Smith 33, Heikkinen 51 og, Blackstock 54

Ref: A D'Urso (Essex) 5 Kept his cards in his pocket which makes a welcome change, and tried to allow the game to flow however at least one of the two first half incidents should have resulted in a Luton penalty and where all that stoppage time came from at the end of the first half only he knows

Southampton 1 QPR 2, Saturday September 30, 2006, Championship

Right on half time it looked as though the visitors would be reduced to ten men when some off the ball petulance from Rehman gave Skachel the chance to hurl himself to the floor like a victim of chemical warfare. D'Urso immediately reached for his pocket and normally that means only one thing but this time he produced only a yellow card.

Licka fired over the bar from the edge of the penalty area and Rasiak headed the final of Southampton 's eleven corners wide of the post. As Andy D'Urso punished QPR's time wasting with five added minutes Rasiak's desperation showed with the most outrageous dive I've seen in many a long year trying to milk a penalty. Now D'Urso, as we know, has never been shy of an outrageous decision against QPR but even he wasn't buying this one - although he didn't produce the yellow card Rasiak deserved.

Licka found his way into the book a moment later though when he took all his frustration out in a big hit on Lee Cook.

Southampton: Davis 4, Makin 6, Pele 6, Baird 6 (Jones 70, 6), Bale 7, Skacel 7, Licka 7, Viafara 6, Wright 7 (Dyer 57, 7), Rasiak 7, Wright-Phillips 7 (Surman 77, -)

Subs not used: Miller, Ostlund

Scorer: Wright

Bookings: Licka 90

QPR: P Jones 8, Bignot 7, Rehman 8, Stewart 8, Rose 5 (Kanyuka 21, 8), Rowlands 8, Bircham 7 (Lomas 62, 6), Bailey 6 (Smith 62, 6), Cook 7, R Jones 8, Blackstock 8

Subs not used: Royce, Gallen

Scorers: Blackstock 35, R Jones 41

Bookings: Rehman 43

Referee - Andy D'Urso 8 One of his all time best ever games I think! Just two bookings, both deserved and apart from that play was allowed to flow, free kicks were evenly distributed, competence and common sense was shown. Unbelievable really. Should have booked Rasiak for his outrageous piece of play acting near the end and failed to clamp down on some pretty blatant time wasting from QPR but other than that disturbingly good.

Other appointments:

QPR 1 Watford 2, April 22 2006, sent off Marc Nygaard for two bookings, one for over celebrating and the other when Darius Henderson feigned injury.

Sheff Wed 1 QPR 1, March 11 2006, angered the home fans with a series of free kicks in QPR’s favour

QPR 1 Palace 3, October 3 2005, showed seven yellow cards including four to QPR players

Ipswich 0 QPR 2, February 26 2005, goals from Furlong and Shittu

QPR 0 Brighton 0, January 1 2005, very harsh red card for Paul Furlong

QPR 1 Luton 1, March 27 2004, two bookings shared between the sides

QPR 0 Cambridge 0, February 2 2002, two bookings for Richard Pacquette and Marcus Bignot

QPR 1 Watford 1, March 7 2001, awarded Rangers a penalty scored by Michel Ngonge

QPR 1 Watford 2, February 20 1999, sent off Danny Maddix in the second half

QPR 3 Walsall 1, August 26 1998, game went to extra time in first round of League Cup

QPR 5 Middlesbrough 0, March 4 1998, sent off Andy Townsend for two quick fire bookings.

QPR 0 Wolves 2, August 12 1997, Rangers crash out of League Cup at home.

Stats

D'Urso has had 20 matches this season which have produced a below-average 64 yellow cards (3.2 a game) and an above average six reds. Four of those sendings off have come in his last nine matches so he's in prolific form coming into this game. His biggest haul so far this season is eight yellow in Derby 's 2-1 win at Brighton back in August. He's already refereed Bolton once this season, in a 1-0 home defeat by Leeds .

Last season he booked 99 (2.41) and sent seven off in 41 games. Those games included Bolton's home wins over relegated sides Peterborough and Wolves, as well as the League One play off final between Brentford and Yeovil. He booked seven in the League One meeting between Crawley and Doncaster which was easily his highest total in a single game all season.

Other Listings

Championship >>> Kevin Friend drops out of the Premier League for Reading v Blackpool and Lee Probert does likewise for Millwall v Sheffield Wednesday.

League One >>> Stuart Attwell has Bradford v Preston.

Tweet @loftforwords

Pictures — Action Images

Photo: Action Images



Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.


You need to login in order to post your comments

Derby County Polls

About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Advertising
© FansNetwork 2024