Gamal Al-Ghandour

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Gamal Mahmoud Ahmed Al-Ghandour (Arabic: جمال محمود أحمد الغندور‎) (born June 12, 1957) is a retired Egyptian referee.

Contents

[edit] Personal data

Height: 187 cm , Weight: 86 kg
Referee since: 1981
Egyptian 1st Division: 1989
FIFA Badge: 1993

[edit] Details

El-Ghandour has refereed the 2002 African Cup of Nations final (Cameroon vs Senegal), the second leg of the 2002 African Cup Winners' Cup final (Kotoko (Gha) 2:1 WAC (Mar)), and five successive African Cup of Nations, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000, and 2002. He is the first African referee to run a match in the UEFA European Football Championship. He has also participated in one Olympic Games, one FIFA Confederation Cup (2001), and one AFC Asian Cup.

He also refereed in two FIFA World Cups, France 1998 and Korea/Japan 2002 [1][2]

He is also the first Egyptian referee to play as a professional referee (Japanese League 1999)

Ghandour was involved in the controversial South Korea - Spain quarterfinals in the 2002 World Cup where he was responsible for a number of embarrassing decisions, including giving a goal kick to South Korea after Joaquín stopped the ball in front of the line, oh which led to the Spanish being denied two goals. Eventually Spain was beaten on penalties. The last penalty that Spain missed was also seen as controversial, Joaquín's shot was blocked by Lee Woon-Jae who stepped off his line before the ball was actually touched, breaking the rules, there was, however, no action taken. After the match there was international condemnation of the refereeing conduct and decisions[3] [4]. Allegations were rife that the match was fixed, something that the FIFA officials brushed away. Ghandour was rumoured to have received a car from the FIFA vice-president Chung Mong-joon, a South Korean, in exchange for favouring the home side in the quarterfinals[5]. These allegations prompted Ghandour to threaten legal action. Eventually Ghandour chose to end his illustrious career under a cloud of suspicion.

Ghandour also refereed in a controversial match between hosts UAE and Iraq in the 1996 Asian Cup. The UAE eventually won 1-0 after extra time, however many clear decisions went against the Iraqis, including a UAE defender punching the ball out of the area. The UAE faced Kuwait in the semi-final, with the Kuwaiti team having announced that they would withdraw had Iraq qualified.

[edit] International match list

Date
/
Match
/
Venue
Competition
24.07.1993
Uganda
1-0
Sudan
Kampala
African Cup of Nations Q 94 
13.11.1994
Tunisia
1-1
Togo
Tunis
African Cup of Nations Q 96
24.08.1995
KSA
2-0
Syria
Ta'ef
Asian Olympic Q 96
16.01.1996
Gabon
1-2
Liberia
Durban
African Cup of Nations 96
21.01.1996
C.d'Ivoire
1-0
Mozambiqe
Port. Elz.
African Cup of Nations 96
31.01.1996
Ghana
0-3
S.Africa 
Johannesberg
African Cup of Nations 96
03.03.1996
Zimbabwe
0-1
Nigeria 
Harrari
African Olympic Q 96
16.06.1996
C.d'Ivoire
1-1
Congo
Abidjan
African World Cup Q 98
01.07.1996
Sweden
0-2
China
Miami
Women Olympics 96 
02.07.1996
Brazil
3-1
Hungary
Miami
Olympic Games Atlanta 96
01.08.1996
Argentina
4-0
Spain
Bermengham
Olympic Games Atlanta 96
02.08.1996
Brazil
5-0
Portugal
Athens
Olympic Games Atlanta 96
17.11.1996
Angola
2-1
Zimbabwe
Luanda
African World Cup Q 98
01.12.1996
KSA
6-0
Thailand
Dubai
Asian Cup of Nations 96
02.12.1996
UAE.
1-0
Iraq
Abu Dhabi
Asian Cup of Nations 96
03.12.1996
KSA
5-4
Iran
Abu Dhabi
Asian Cup of Nations 96
08.06.1997
S.Africa
3-0
Zambia 
Johannesberg 
African World Cup Q 98
17.08.1997
Zimbabwe
1-2
Cameroon 
Harrari
African World Cup Q 98
13.10.1997
KSA
1-0
Qatar
Ryadah
Asian World Cup Q 98
07.02.1998
B.Faso
0-1
R.D.Congo 
Waga Dogo
African Cup of Nations 98
27.02.1998
B.Faso
3-4
Cameroon
Waga Dogo
African Cup of Nations 98
17.06.1998
Chile
1-1
Austria 
St. Etian
World Cup France 98
25.06.1998
Yugoslavia
1-0
USA. 
Nant
World Cup France 98
03.07.1998
Brazil
3-2
Denmark
Nant
World Cup France 98
01.08.1999
Lebanon
3-1
Jordan 
Amman
9th Panarab Games
02.08.1999
Iraq
4-0
Lebanon 
Amman
9th Panarab Games
16.08.1999
Jordan
3-1
Qatar 
Amman
9th Panarab Games
31.08.1999<;;;/font>
Jordan
3-1p
Iraq 
;
Amman
9th Panarab Games
09.10.1999
Slovenia
0-3
Greece 
Maribor
European Cup Nations Q 2000
23.01.2000
S.Africa
3-1
Gabon
Kumasi
African Cup of Nations 2000 
31.01.2000
Ghana
0-2
C.d'Ivoire 
Accra
African Cup of Nations 2000
10.02.2000
Nigeira
2-0
S.Africa
Lagos
African Cup of Nations 2000
13.06.2000
Norway
1-0
Spain
Rotterdam
European Cup of Nations 2000
21.06.2000
Czech
2-0
Denmark
Liège
European Cup of Nations 2000
06.01.2001
Egypt
2-1
UAE
Cairo
Friendly
15.01.2001
Tunisia
0-1
Morocco
Tunis
African Cup Qualifiers
15.01.2001
Egypt
1-0
N.Korea
Cairo
Friendly
27.01.2001
Nigeria
3-0
Sudan
Nigeria
African World Cup Q 2002
25.02.2001
Cameroun
1-0
Zambia
Yaoundé
African World Cup Q 2002
19.03.2001
Egypt
3-3
Estonia
Cairo
Friendly
30.05.2001
France
5-0
Korea
Seoul
FIFA Confederation Cup
07.06.2001
France
2-1
Brazil
Seoul
FIFA Confederation Cup
02.09.2001
Mexico
2-1
Jamaica
Jamaica
CONCACAF World Cup Q 2002
25.01.2002
Cameroon
1-0
C.d'Ivoire
Mali
African Cup of Nations 2002
30.01.2002
South Africa
3-1
Morocco
Mali
African Cup of Nations 2002
10.02.2002
Cameroon
0-0 p3/2
Senegal
Mali
African Cup of Nations 2002 Final
07.06.2002
Spain
3-1
Paraguay
Korea
World Cup Korea/Japan 02
13.06.2002
Brazil
5-2
Costa Rica
Korea
World Cup Korea/Japan 02
22.06.2002
Korea
0-0 p5/3
Spain
Korea
World Cup Korea/Japan 02
Competition
Number of Matches
World Cup
6
FIFA Confederation Cup
2
Olympic Games
4
<European Cup of Nations
2
African Cup of Nations>
11
Asian Cup of Nations
3
Asian World Cup Qualifiers
1
European Cup Qualifiers
1
Asian Olympic Qualifiers
1
CONCACAF World Cup Qualifiers
1
African Cup Qualifiers
3
African World Cup Qualifiers
6
African Olympic Qualifiers
1
Pan Arab Games
4
Friendlies
3

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Korean miracle spoilt by refereeing farce. Telegraph (2006-06-23). Retrieved on 2006-12-14.
  2. ^ Korean dream lives on. BBC Sport (2002-06-22). Retrieved on 2006-08-06.
  3. ^ Korean miracle spoilt by refereeing farce. Telegraph (2006-06-23). Retrieved on 2006-12-14.
  4. ^ Japan concerned over poor refereeing at World Cup. Japan Today (2002-06-22). Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
  5. ^ Ghandour's memory lane. BBC Sport (2003-02-08). Retrieved on 2007-11-18.