Rudolf Kreitlein
Full name | Rudolf Kreitlein | ||
---|---|---|---|
Born |
Fürth, Germany | 14 November 1919||
Died |
31 July 2012 Stuttgart, Germany | (aged 92)||
Other occupation | Tailor | ||
Domestic | |||
Years | League | Role | |
1963–1969 | Bundesliga | Referee | |
International | |||
Years | League | Role | |
1966 | UEFA | Referee |
Rudolf Kreitlein (14 November 1919, in Fürth – 31 July 2012, in Stuttgart) was a German international football referee, active in the 1960s.
England v Argentina, 1966 World Cup
Kreitlein is perhaps best known for having refereed the 1966 World Cup quarter-final match between England and Argentina in which he dismissed Antonio Rattín from the field of play in the 35th minute of the game for dissent.[1] Rattín initially refused to leave the pitch, arguing furiously with Kreitlein (even though neither man understood each other's native language) and the game was held up for several minutes until Rattín reluctantly departed. It was also during that game that Jack Charlton was cautioned, only to discover the fact the next day from the newspaper report. As a result of this incident, Kreitlein and Ken Aston developed the idea of yellow cards and red cards to aid on-field communication in football. Kreitlein, who had never seen the match, requested a copy of the game from the Football Association in 2006.[2] Kreitlein retired from international competition in 1967.[3]
Career
Kreitlein's rise to prominence within the European game was evident prior to the World Cup. He had been appointed as one of the German representatives for the 1963 UEFA Youth Championship in England, refereeing the final between England and Northern Ireland at Wembley (his assistants were the Hungarian orchestral conductor and referee István Zsolt and the Belgian Mark Raemaekers).
Kreitlein had been a Bundesliga referee from its inauguration in 1963 but had only refereed 36 matches at national level before being appointed referee (in May 1966) to the European Cup Final, where he took charge of the game between Real Madrid and Partizan Belgrade in Brussels.
References
- ^ Kuper, Simon (25 February 2002). "The conflict lives on". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
- ^ "Chips Denied". The FA. [dead link]
- ^ "DFB trauert um FIFA-Schiedsrichter Rudolf Kreitlein". German Football Association (in German). 1 August 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2012.