QPR have referee Lee Mason in charge of their game this weekend for the first time this season – Mason refereed two crucial televised clashes in the R’s promotion season last term.
Referee >>> Lee Mason (Lancashire) Premiership official who joined the list in 2002 and refereed QPR’s memorable 1-0 win at Aston Villa in the League Cup three.
Assistants >>> Andy Halliday (North Yorkshire) and Mick McDonough (Newcastle)
Fourth Official >>> Mark Clattenburg (Durham) QPR’s lucky referee having presided over two QPR promotions and a play off semi final win.
Cardiff 2 QPR 2, Saturday April 23, 2011
The sloppy defending continued on the quarter hour, although QPR were perhaps a little unfortunate to be defending at all after J’Lloyd Samuel had overrun the ball down the left flank and then taken an obvious dive to win a free kick from Bradley Orr – one of the few decisions referee Lee Mason got wrong on the day. Peter Whittingham whipped in the free kick from wide and Cardiff appealed for a penalty after Dekel Keinan hit the deck at the back post after clashing with Heidar Helguson. It looked to me, from the far end of the ground, like they’d just got tangled up with each other and it was the very definition of six of one and half a dozen of another. From the resulting throw in Cardiff were able to find Burke completely unmarked in the area and he drilled wide when well placed to do better. I’ve written in my notes around the half hour mark that the game seemed to be settling down. QPR were keeping possession better than they have in the three most recent games, though still not doing so that well, while Cardiff were happy, mostly through Whittingham, to keep pumping balls in behind the QPR defence and turning what seemed to be a very nervous back four around. Lee Mason showed a yellow card for the first time in the game when Whittingham deliberately thrust up and arm to bring a ball down and prevent it going through to Bradley Orr who would have been flying into space down the right had the ball reached him but overall there was little to choose between the sides at this point and the game seemed to be calming down.
I cannot possibly describe to you therefore just how frustrating it was to concede another goal having weathered the early Cardiff storm. Some repeat themes led to it – a ball in behind QPR into the right channel had the defence in trouble and Jay Bothroyd was given far too much time and space having collected it to do as he wanted. On this occasion, rather than shooting, he crossed into the area and after the ball had been deflected into his path by Matt Connolly’s hand Bellamy lashed the ball into the top corner to give his side the lead. Lee Mason held his hands aloft to indicate that an advantage had been played and a penalty would have been awarded anyway had Bellamy not scored.
A foul on Smith by Quinn wide on the left gave Taarabt a chance to cross from wide but he overhit and missed the seven waiting players in the penalty area. Then Tommy Smith, who certainly wasn’t having his best game for the club, kept a Paddy Kenny pass in right on the touchline and set up Routledge to cross for Helguson at the back post. The big Icelandic striker became embroiled in a wrestling match with Quinn as the cross arrived and when both players crashed to the floor Mason awarded a free kick to Cardiff – whoever was the man on the goal side was always likely to get that decision, had it been Helguson Rangers could have had a penalty.
Rangers conceded another free kick, right at the other end of the field, almost immediately. Burke moved the ball past Gorkss on the edge of the area and then ran into the Latvian who could hardly get out of the way but was penalised by Lee Mason anyway. The free kick seemed perfectly placed, right of centre and right on the edge of the area, for Peter Whittingham to try with his left foot and although he did just that his shot was poor, drilled low and straight into the wall which held firm.
Having penalised Gorkss when he couldn’t really get out of the way Mason then booked Quinn in a similar situation, Routledge was the man blocked off on this occasion as he steamed forward in a pacey counter attack. Taarabt’s free kick was delivered into a better area than his last attempt but Bywater flew off his line and claimed it well.
Mason, having added three minutes to a first half with no injuries or substitutions, then added just two to a second half of several stoppages and four substitutions but Cardiff were a spent force by this point while QPR had missed their one big chance. A draw was a much better result for the Londoners anyway, and the reaction of the players when the whistle duly followed said everything about what the result and performance meant.
Cardiff: Bywater 6, McNaughton 6, Quinn 7, Keinan 6, Samuel 6, Burke 6 (Emmanuel-Thomas 77, 6), Whittingham 7, McPhail 7, Olofinjana 7, Bellamy 8 (Chopra 87, -), Bothroyd 8
Subs Not Used: Heaton, Rae, Hudson, Blake, Matthews
Booked: Whittingham (handball), Quinn (foul)
Goals: Bothroyd 6 (unassisted), Bellamy 35 (assisted Bothroyd)
QPR: Kenny 8, Orr 6, Gorkss 5, Connolly 6 (Hall 80, 7), Hill 6, Derry 7, Faurlin 6, Routledge 8, Smith 5 (Agyemang 69, 7), Taarabt 8, Helguson 6
Subs Not Used: Cerny, Buzsaky, Hulse, Ephraim, Miller
Goals: Taarabt 10 (assisted Faurlin), 71 (assisted Routledge)
Referee: Lee Mason (Lancashire) 8 One or two soft decisions, and Cardiff are as usual complaining bitterly about a penalty appeal of theirs he waved away but I think he called that one right. Overall he refereed the game very well, giving it every chance and only handing out cards when absolutely necessary. He’s not normally my favourite referee but he was excellent here.
Bristol City 1 QPR 1, Friday October 22, 2010
City sensed their chance. They loaded the left side of their team with Rose, Stead and Haynes in an effort to exploit the space left when Walker ran forward for QPR. Frustration started to grow in the visiting ranks with Walker rightly yellow carded for a show of dissent when he tried to take Stead on, lost the ball and then fouled his man on halfway. A second yellow card quickly followed for Derry who fouled Marvin Elliott to prevent another swift City counter attack – that one looked harsher from referee Lee Mason, but Derry was too busy delivering a volley of abuse to Adel Taarabt who had lost the ball again to create the problem to complain to the referee. He did find time to ask a question of Mason a minute later though when Elliott committed exactly the same foul on Kyle Walker in exactly the same part of the pitch and the exact same situation but was let off with just a warning.
Then in the final seconds of three added minutes Shaun Derry hooked an improvised shot over James who watched with heart in mouth as it dropped a foot wide of the far post. Derry was actually lucky to still be involved in the game at this stage as just a minute earlier he was the subject of a terrible tackle from Danny Rose back in his own half. Two footed, off the ground, late and nowhere near the ball it was as clear a red card as you’ll see all season and why Mr Mason chose to only issue a yellow when he’s usually not shy of handing out cards like confetti at a wedding only he knows. Rose strikes me as an enthusiastic player rather than a nasty one, so I’m not for one minute suggesting that he meant to hurt Derry or even execute the challenge in the way that he did, but it was an absolute horror all the same and the red card should have been out before Derry even hit the ground.
Even from that chance though Rangers immediately looked vulnerable to a quick break and Faurlin was harshly yellow carded for holding Stead as City broke down field.
There were further corners for Rangers, and a late half hearted penalty appeal from Marvin Elliott who felt Clint Hill had impeded his advance towards a back post cross, but having worked so hard to get back into the game there seemed to be a feeling among the QPR players that a point wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world while City for their part seemed so deflated by the late set back a second coming was well beyond them.
Bristol City: James 7, Carey 6, Caulker 8, Fontaine 7, McAllister 6, Adomah 6 (Cisse 58, 6), Elliott 6, Johnson 5, Rose 7, Haynes 5, Stead 8
Subs Not Used: Gerken, Hunt, Stewart, Clarkson, Sproule, Pitman
Booked: Rose (foul), Elliott (foul)
Goals: Stead 16 (unassisted)
QPR: Kenny 8, Walker 8, Gorkss 6, Connolly 6, Hill 6, Derry 6, Faurlin 7, Ephraim 5 (Smith 57, 6), Taarabt 5 (Agyemang 78, 7),Helguson 6 (Hulse 64, 6)
Subs Not Used: Cerny, Orr, Hall, Mahon
Booked: Walker (dissent), Derry (foul), Gorkss (foul), Faurlin (foul)
. Goals: Agyemang 84 (assisted Smith/Connolly)
Referee: Lee Mason (Lancashire) 6 My main criticism of him, as it always has been, is more a general point about the way he controls games rather than any specific criticism of anything he did tonight. I like a referee that calms situations, has a word on the run, and man manages players rather than flashing cards around. Mason always behaves like the kid that was bullied at school and now has a chance for revenge but doesn’t really have the self confidence to carry it out in any kind of serious way. So he hands out cards. For everything. Most referees start from a free kick and work up from there, but Mason’s starting point seems to be that everything is a booking. I thought Derry, Faurlin and Elliott were very unlucky to be booked here and it was never a six card match in a million years. The one genuinely nasty tackle in the game was from Rose and when a red card was surely the only option Mason showed yellow. Not a good referee.
Aston Villa 0 QPR 1, Wednesday September 24, 2008
Rangers also had cause to worry about the referee. I’m always wary of Premiership officials refereeing Premiership teams in situations like this because as soon as the lower league side takes the lead all the decisions start going the way of the big clubs and sure enough, probably with the incorrect decision to award QPR a corner for the goal still fresh in his mind, Mason started to award one questionable free kick after another to the home side. The most farcical saw Di Carmine, introduced for Agyemang with 25 minutes to go, chase Zat Knight down to his own byline and then watch perplexed as the big man fell over under no contact whatsoever and picked the ball up on his way down only to be awarded a free kick himself. Ledesma was harshly penalised for a foul that looked like a good tackle and Delaney was booked for a poor lunge on Craig Gardner - Villa quickly followed this up with bookings of their own for Gardner and Cuellar as frustration started to set in.
Parejo stung the keeper’s hands with a low drive eight minutes from time but QPR’s attacking ambition was becoming more and more limited with each passing minute and whenever they did venture into the Villa half Mason immediately whistled against them and the ball came flying back over their heads.
Aston Villa: Guzan 6, Gardner 6, Cuellar 6, Knight 5, Shorey 6, Osbourne 5 (Routledge 67, 5), Petrov 5, Barry 5, Ashley Young 7, Harewood 4 (Agbonlahor 67, 6), Carew 7
Subs Not Used: Friedel, Delfouneso, Davies, Salifou, Reo-Coker
Booked: Cuellar (foul) Gardner (foul)
QPR: Cerny 7, Connolly 7, Hall 8, Stewart 9, Delaney 5, Mahon 7, Rowlands 8, Parejo 8, Ledesma 8 (Balanta 90, -), Buzsaky 7 (Leigertwood 81, -), Agyemang 6 (Di Carmine 66, 6)
Subs Not Used: Camp, Blackstock, Gorkss, Ephraim
Booked: Delaney (foul)
Goals: Stewart 58 (assisted Parejo)
Referee: Lee Mason (Lancashire) 4 Not too bad at all for the first hour but after getting the corner decision so badly wrong in the lead up to the goal he then seemed desperate to even things up. Some strange decisions given from that point on reaffirming my dislike for Premiership refs when Premiership teams are losing to sides from lower divisions. Look after your own and all that, he certainly did his best for them in the last half hour.
Leicester 1 QPR 1, Saturday September 15, 2007
It took fully 20 minutes for QPR's long ball game to yield any kind of result. Finally one of the punts dropped around the penalty area and Blackstock was able to knock it back to Rowlands who volleyed over under pressure. Blackstock was clearly growing frustrated again as the half wore on and that only increased when he chased Bruno N'Gotty down to the corner flag and successfully robbed him of possession only for referee Lee Mason to award a generous free kick in the home team's favour.
Three minutes later though the inevitable Leicester goal arrived. Mikele Leigertwood gave the ball away in a poor area and then Damion Stewart foolishly left his foot in on Campbell after Leicester worked the ball into the penalty area. Mason quickly pointed to the spot. It was maybe a little soft, and Campbell certainly went over very easily, but he was heading away from the goal and offering little threat to QPR so Stewart should have left him well alone. The ever impressive Iain Hume stepped up and sent Camp the wrong way.
Rangers got a let off from the officials soon after though when Hume crossed for Cort to finally find the target with a header but a late flag from the linesman ruled the goal out.
Leicester: Fulop 7, N'Gotty 6, Kisnorbo 8, McAuley 7, Sheehan 7, Hume 8, Clemence 7, Wesolowski 7, Porter 8 (Kishishev 78, 5), Campbell 7 (Chambers 73, 5), Cort 5 (De Vries 90, -)
Subs Not Used: Henderson, Newton
Booked: McAuley (foul)
Goals: Hume 63 pen (assisted Campbell)
QPR: Camp 7, Cullip 8, Stewart 6, Rehman 5, Barker 5, Rowlands 5, Leigertwood 6, Bolder 5 (Ephraim 72, 8), Moore 3, Blackstock 6, Sahar 5 (Nardiello 46, 7)
Subs Not Used: Cole, Bignot, Curtis
Booked: Leigertwood (foul)
Goals: Leigertwood 82 (assisted Rowlands)
Referee: Lee Mason (Lancashire) 7 Well refereed with only a couple of cards. The penalty looked pretty blatant to me at the time and I'd certainly have been furious if we'd been denied a spot kick in similar circumstances.
West Brom 3 QPR 3, Tuesday October 31, 2006
Lee Mason didn't help their cause when they finally got Cook running towards the goal in a three on three only to be pulled right back to the halfway line for a free kick. Obviously Mr Mason, who remember bought that shocking dive from Gavin Williams and awarded a penalty to Ipswich at Loftus Road in August, wouldn't know the advantage rule if it wandered up and stole his wallet.
In the end that decision played into QPR's hands because, clearly embarrassed and apologetic to any QPR player that would listen, Mason quickly awarded a free kick for absolutely nothing right on the edge of the box right of centre. Lee Cook took the set piece - he feigned to chip it to the back post and then sent a curling effort an inch wide of the top corner with the keeper beaten.
WBA: Zuberbuhler 5, Watson 6, Perry 5, Davies 4, Greening 8, Ellington 7 (Phillips 72, 7), Gera 8, Albrechtsen 8, Kamara 9, Koumas 8, Wallwork 7 (Hartson 85, -)
Subs not used: Chaplow, McShane, Hoult
Scorers: Ellington 8, Kamara 40, Kamara 54
Rangers: Royce 8, Bignot 7, Rehman 4, Gallen 6, Ainsworth 5, Lomas 6, Cook 7, Stewart 7, Blackstock 6 (Nygaard 62, 6), Smith 6, Mancienne 6
Subs not used: Milanese, Ward, Rowlands, Jones
Bookings: Smith, Lomas, Bignot
Scorers: Stewart 45, Gallen 47, Nygaard 77
Referee: Lee Mason 5 (Lancashire) Did a half decent job overall but there were four terrible decisions in the second half that really stuck out. Lomas and Gallen were both penalised for winning the ball, Lee Cook was denied a run on goal by his lack of advantage rule knowledge and then to make up for that he gave QPR a free kick on the edge of the area for nothing. Also booked Jimmy Smith very harshly. Ably assisted by the young linesman from the Colchester game - there's always lots of very bizarre flag waving when he's around and last night was no exception, much to the home fans' disgust!
Prior to that Mason refereed a 3-1 home defeat by Ipswich in Gary Waddock’s time in charge that featured no cards, but a very debatable penalty being awarded to the Tractor Boys. He was also in charge for a 2-1 defeat at the City Ground against Nottingham Forest in 2004 and a 3-3 draw at Rushden and Diamonds when Gareth Ainsworth scored one of the QPR goals of all time and a staggering eight yellow cards were shown.
So far this season Mason has shown 42 yellows in 13 matches (3.23 a game). He started like a maniac, booking 19 players in his first three games of the season, but has calmed somewhat lately with just seven cards in his last four matches. He’s sent off two players so far, both in the same Everton v Chelsea game back at the end of October.
Last season he refereed Liverpool’s 3-1 defeat at Newcastle, and 5-2 win at Fulham late in the campaign. This season he was in charge of their 2-0 win at West Brom, awarding a very harsh penalty in favour of Kenny Dlaglish’s men after nine minutes.
Mason has always been rather card happy, and his hefty total of 135 bookings and five reds across 33 appointments last season averaged out at about four cards a match. He showed eight when Arsenal beat Everton 2-1 last season, and nine when Chelsea drew 3-3 against Aston Villa. At Christmas he incurred the wrath of Alex Ferguson after allowing late Birmingham equaliser against United at St Andrews, and Ian Holloway was less than impressed when he missed a blatant Blackpool penalty appeal in a home game against Arsenal.
The season before he showed 106 yellows (3.02 a game) and seven reds in 35 games, the majority of which came in the Premiership. His highest total in a single match was seven yellows and a red in a bad tempered game between Birmingham and West Ham.
Premiership >>> Mike Dean’s howler in the Newcastle v Chelsea match where he failed to produce a blatant red card for David Luiz in the opening four minutes of the game hasn’t cost him his place on the Premiership list this weekend – he has West Brom v Wigan. No appointment for Stuart Attwell though whose red card for Gary Cahill at Spurs last week has been overturned ahead of Bolton’s game with Aston Villa. Mark Clattenburg has the big Chelsea v Man City Monday Night Football.
Championship >>> Recipe for disaster: take Millwall v Cardiff, appoint Gavin Ward as referee, retire to safe distance.
League One >>> Premiership referee Kevin Friend drops down for Oldham v Sheff Wed while our old mate Andy D’Urso has Orient v Exeter.
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