Michel Vautrot

Michel Vautrot
Born (1945-10-23) October 23, 1945
Saint-Vit, France
Domestic
Years League Role
1973–1991 French First Division Referee
International
Years League Role
1975–1990 FIFA-listed Referee

Michel Vautrot (born October 23, 1945 in Saint-Vit, Doubs) is a retired football (soccer) referee from France. He is mostly known for supervising 5 matches in the FIFA World Cup: two in 1982 and three in 1990. He refereed the Club World Cup final in 1983 on National Stadium Tokyo between Hamburg S.V. (West Germany) and Grêmio F.B.P.A. (Brazil). Also refereed three European Championships in 1984 in 1988, including the final game between the USSR and the Netherlands. In addition, he refereed in the European Cup 1985–86, including the final game between the FC Steaua Bucharest and FC Barcelona.

In 1986, Roma president Dino Viola was banned by UEFA for attempting to bribe referee Michel Vautrot with £50,000 prior to the European Cup semi-final 2nd leg between Roma and Dundee United in 1984.

Roma were later to lose the final on penalties to Liverpool.

One of his more infamous moments came in the 1990 World Cup semi finals between hosts Italy and champions Argentina. In the first period extra time, 8 minutes of stoppages were added. He later explained that he had forgotten to check his watch [1]

References

Preceded by
1984
Czechoslovakia Vojtech Christov
UEFA European Football Championship final match referees
1988
France Michel Vautrot
Succeeded by
1992
Switzerland Bruno Galler (Switzerland)
Preceded by
European Cup Final 1985
Switzerland André Daina
European Cup Referees
Final 1986
France Michel Vautrot
Succeeded by
European Cup Final 1987
Belgium Alexis Ponnet


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.