Keith Burge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Keith Burge
Personal information
Full name William Keith Burge
Date of birth August 10, 1950 (1950-08-10) (age 57)
Place of birth    Tonypandy, Rhondda Cynon Taff,
Glamorgan, Wales
Other occupation    Civil servant
Domestic
Years League Role
1986-1992
1992-1999
Football League
Premier League
Referee
Referee
International
1986-1995 FIFA listed Referee

William Keith Burge[1] (known as Keith Burge and born August 10, 1950[2]) is a Welsh former football referee. He officiated in the English Football League and Premier League, and for FIFA. He hails from Tonypandy in the county borough of Rhondda Cynon Taff, Glamorgan. His other occupation is as a civil servant.[3]

[edit] Career

He was appointed as a referee to the Football League in 1986, at the age of thirty-five - the last Welsh referee to join the English list, as this option was withdrawn by UEFA in 1997.[4][3]

He was on the first list of referees to officiate in the new Premier League for the 1992-93 season, and made his debut there on September 5, 1992, taking charge of the 3-2 win by Wimbledon over Arsenal at Plough Lane.[5]

He was a FIFA official until 1995, when he reached the international retirement age of forty-five. One of his last appointments was in the Euro '96 qualifying tournament, when Lithuania drew 0-0 at home to Croatia on March 29, 1995.[6]

Domestically, he retained his place on the Premier League list for six seasons, until he retired from refereeing completely after his final match in the Premier League, a 2-1 win by Manchester United over Aston Villa at Old Trafford on May 1, 1999.[7]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Full name, confirmed on statistical webpage: Linguasport.com website.
  2. ^ Birthday confirmation: UEFA.com PDF newsletter (UEFA Direct, p.23).
  3. ^ a b Article about Burge: Sunday Mirror online, via the FindArticles service.
  4. ^ Last Welsh referee on English list: mention in a HTML-based cached version of the Monmouthshire Referees online PDF newsletter (03-2003, p.3).
  5. ^ First Premier League match, Wimbledon v. Arsenal, 1992: soccerbase.com website.
  6. ^ Lithuania v. Croatia, Euro '96 qualifying: RSSSF statistical website.
  7. ^ Last ever match, Man Utd v. Aston Villa, 1999: soccerbase.com website.

[edit] External links