
Daily Cannon
·21 de agosto de 2025
Liverpool fan to referee Arsenal vs Leeds

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Yahoo sportsDaily Cannon
·21 de agosto de 2025
Photo by Catherine Ivill/Getty Images
Jarred Gillett will referee Arsenal’s game against Leeds United on Saturday, just one week before Arsenal face Liverpool.
The Australian official is a known Liverpool supporter and, under Premier League rules, is not allowed to take charge of their matches.
Yet, he can still be appointed to oversee games involving Liverpool’s direct rivals.
That is what frustrates many Arsenal fans.
In October 2024, Gillett was on VAR duty when Arsenal lost 2-0 at Bournemouth.
With just 30 minutes on the clock, William Saliba was shown a yellow card by Rob Jones (also not allowed to take charge of Liverpool matches because he is from the Wirral) for a foul on Evanilson, but Gillett, against VAR guidelines on when to get involved, advised a review.
Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images
The booking was upgraded to a straight red card, meaning Saliba missed Arsenal’s next match – against Liverpool.
For supporters, that incident is a clear example of how an official’s decision, even without refereeing Liverpool directly, can still affect the title race.
Gillett was also referee when Yerson Mosquera choked Kai Havertz last season before sticking his fingers between Gabriel Jesus’s arse cheeks. He remained on the pitch. He also made a number of controversial calls in a game against Chelsea.
image via ESPN
Gillett’s Liverpool links are well established. He grew up a fan in Australia and later studied at Liverpool John Moores University.
Reports have long said he signed paperwork confirming he could not referee Liverpool games. That safeguard does nothing, however, to stop him being put in charge of their rivals.
Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images
With Arsenal and Liverpool set to fight it out for the title once again, the decision to appoint him for the Leeds game, a week before facing Liverpool, is bound to raise questions.
Fans will again question why an official so openly tied to one club is allowed to referee fixtures that could directly affect their rivals’ season.
And, once again they will be told to be quiet, assured that referees, uniquely among humans, are immune to bias, even of the unconscious kind.
The standard for PGMOL should not simply be the absence of bias, but the absence of any suspicion of it.
On that measure, this appointment falls short yet again.
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