6 SCGNED Merk
While both his assistants Christian Schräer
and Jan-Hendrik Salver got their World Cup début in their home country, Markus
Merk was among the eight referees who had already whistled at the previous
edition. Still, it was certainly a special moment for Merk as well, being the “home
referee”.
The best way to describe his performance
would be that he is a referee that makes his presence on the pitch known, heard
and felt. From the beginning, he whistled very strictly and often for small
infringements. One can debate if such a line was needed or if it even disrupted
a game that wasn’t free flowing to begin with. While his approach was consistent
most of the time, there were a couple of scenes where he did not punish challenges that appeared to have been late fouls.
What was noticeable was that Merk changed
his style in the second half: He tried to use the advantage rule more, did not whistle
as strictly as before and brought in his soft skills more. For the lack
of a better word, it felt a bit weird at times comparing some very strict and firm
reactions compared to some more lenient management of dissent. The
best comparison would be the card presentations – compare the last one given
with the two before that – it should become quite clear then.
On the whole, Merk did just fine. His
disciplinary sanctions were fitting, he correctly denied Serbia & Montenegro
a penalty for handball – the ball had hit the ribs of a Dutch defender (64’).
The ARs were rarely challenged, Christian Schräer was correct in his decisions, including a rather clear onside on the decisive goal. Jan-Hendrik Salver was mistaken once in a tight situation.
Even now, after so many years, Merk is pissed off that he was not appointed in the advanced stages of this WC played in his home country...
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