• Welcome to the ShrimperZone forums.
    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which only gives you limited access.

    Existing Users:.
    Please log-in using your existing username and password. If you have any problems, please see below.

    New Users:
    Join our free community now and gain access to post topics, communicate privately with other members, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and free. Click here to join.

    Fans from other clubs
    We welcome and appreciate supporters from other clubs who wish to engage in sensible discussion. Please feel free to join as above but understand that this is a moderated site and those who cannot play nicely will be quickly removed.

    Assistance Required
    For help with the registration process or accessing your account, please send a note using the Contact us link in the footer, please include your account name. We can then provide you with a new password and verification to get you on the site.

Mick

Life President
Joined
Oct 28, 2003
Messages
10,965
We haven't lost at home to Oxford in the League since Drewe Broughton was sent off some 14 years ago. Mark Rawle scored the only goal of that game and Andy Woodman kept a clean sheet. Surprisingly, we had a player involved in that match who may feature Saturday.

Saturday's referee is the usually very decent Dean Whitestone from Northampton, in his twelfth season as a Football League referee. He is a referee we have seen a lot of at Roots Hall but not that much away from home. A goalkeeper in his playing days, he works for the Metropolitan Police.

This will be his second visit to Roots Hall this season and his second visit to south-east Essex in 10 days. I, and 3,399 others, watched him referee the Billericay v Leatherhead Cup replay very competently. Leatherhead were worthy winners and the penalty and red card that helped them on their way were not contentious.

His last match at Roots Hall was the 1-1 draw with Plymouth back in August. Timlin got our yellow card, they got two.

I emphasised the word "usually" above as his previous Southend match was a bit of a disaster. Last year's defeat at Gillingham where all 5 yellows (two to Ryan Inniss) and a number of strange decisions went against Southend. Even if the Assistant was a major contributory factor, it was a performance well short of his normal standards. The others cautioned were Coker, Timlin and Leonard.

That was his his third Southend match of last season. Before that was the first of the two Gillingham games at the start of the season. A 3-1 defeat and both yellow cards going to the visitors. For the second one, we reversed that score against Coventry with all three cards again going to the visitors. (So all 10 cards he showed in those three matches last year were to away players.)

Prior to that his last visit to Roots Hall was back in March last year against Gillingham. A reasonable performance cautioning 4 Gills and Ben Coker (on the say so of an Assistant). Some thought he was somewhat generous to their no 11 who was eventually subbed after receiving an overdue caution.

His last match before that at Roots Hall was not his best. It was 2015/16 home defeat against Shrewsbury when he cautioned Rea and three of theirs. Main talking point was whether a red card should have been shown for DOGSO, I wouldn't say he got it wrong.

Before that, his last Southend appointment was a first rate performance in the televised match against Oxford in 2013/14. He let the game flow well, no cards, gave us a penalty and we won 3-0 .... what more could you want?

The previous Southend match was the away match back in January of the same season, the first match in our winless run of twelve League matches, when we drew 1-1 at Dagenham. A yellow for Prosser and three of theirs. Having started our winless League run, he did the decent thing and ended it too with that Oxford game.

Before that he was at Roots Hall for the match in 2012/13 when the fans helped clear snow from the pitch and were rewarded with an abject 3-1 home defeat against Wimbledon. He did fine though with, once again, a yellow for Prosser and three of theirs.

Then another excellent performance in the home Cup game against Brentford. Just the one yellow for Woodyard.

Previously, came the game at Shrewsbury in 2011/12, a match which for me, more than any other, cost us promotion. A match that was there for the taking after an early home dismissal. He also cautioned Timlin and Dickinson and their keeper in a strong refereeing performance.

Other matches at Roots Hall include two visits in 2010/11 for the league win against Torquay and the Cup replay with Macclesfield (just 2 and 3 cautions respectively). The season before that saw two visits also. Firstly, the Friday night 0-0 draw with Millwall, when he did pretty well in the face of some uncompromising football from the visitors; he cautioned 5 of theirs and a couple of ours. He also did the home 1-1 draw with Wycombe, cautioning 3 of theirs and one of ours.

Prior to that were in 2008/9 for the opening game win over Peterborough (when three visitors were cautioned) and later that season against Tranmere when we won 2-1 (again three visitors were cautioned). Before that was the 1-0 defeat against Carlisle the previous season in which his performance was probably better than the 8 cautions might imply. His other visit was in 2006/7 when he officiated in the Leicester home draw in which he sent off Richie Foran. Previously to that, in the same season, he was in charge of the away draw at Coventry which I believe he refereed reasonably well.

He had a spell in the "talent group" and used to get plenty of Championship appointments. His card count is usually the right side of average, as it was last season with 119 yellows and just 3 reds from 43 games. Again this season just 49 yellows and 3 reds from 20 matches.

Assisting Mr Whitestone, hopefully rather better than Carl Fitch-Jackson did at Gillingham, will be Andy Williams from Pinner, making his Roots Hall debut, and Paul Yates from Maidstone.

Fourth Official is one time paying customer at Roots Hall, Rob Whitton from Braintree. At one stage he was a whisker away from getting on the Football League referees' list. He had a trial League Two match but foe whatever reason it didn't happen and he's dropped even further down the ladder from National League Premier to National League South. I saw him referee the East Thurrock v Gloucester match a couple of days ago and he was outstanding.
 
And the customary picture:

https://www.southendunited.co.uk/news/2017/november/dean-whitestone-confirmed-as-referee-for-oxford-united-game/

"which has seen his impressive tally of cards shown go up to 1,250 yellow cards and 77 red cards."

I wonder if the writer thinks the tally is impressive because it's high or because it's low. (It's actually well below average.)
What is impressive is that he has refereed over 30 matches a season in each of his previous 11 seasons as a Football League referee. There a few if any who have managed that level of fitness and availability.
 
That hyperbolic critique is presumably based on one match ?

Two matches. Against Plymouth too. Game against Gillingham was one of the most one sided refereeing displays I have ever seen.
 
Back
Top