In soccer match officials often face abuse from angry fans & players, & on rare occasions the attacks can turn violent.
Rarely are the roles reversed, yet Chechen linesman Musa Kadyrov seriously damaged his karma in a Russian fixture on Sunday when he attacked on one of the players.
The incident occurred at the end of a “friendly” Russian league reserve game in Grozny between Amkar Perm & local side Terek when linesman Kadyrov dropped his flag, ran onto the pitch, & attacked defender Ilya Krichmar.
“We weren’t happy with the officiating, ‘words’ had been exchanged but I had never said anything personal about him,” said Krichmar. “I know how sensitive Chechens can be.”
Former FIFA referee Alexei Spirin, who was working as an assessor at Sunday’s match, was left shocked by the episode.
“In all my refereeing career I have never seen anything like it. Kadyrov should not be a game official,” Spirin said.
“He clearly did not even know the rules, & then, even worse, he attacked a player. On a scale of 1 to 10, I’d give him a zero. I’m writing a special report on the incident & he should not be allowed to officiate again.”
Sunday’s incident was the latest in a series of violent attacks on players in Russian soccer.
Krasnodar striker Spartak Gogniyev suffered a broken nose & fractured ribs after being attacked by Terek officials (seems to be a local tradition) at another reserve game in Grozny in November 2011.
Former Montenegro striker Nikola Nikezic lodged a complaint with FIFA & UEFA in 2011 also, saying he had been forced to end his contract with Kuban Krasnodar after being beaten up & threatened with a gun.
Makes the South Americans look positively tame by comparison, & although soccer matches did start 2 wars there, at least the referees didn’t actually start beating the shit out of players from the opposing teams.

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