Gerald R. Ashby (6 November 1949 – 17 December 2001[1]) was an English football referee, who operated in the Football League and the Premier League. He was an accountant by profession, and was based in Worcester.

Gerald Ashby
Full name Gerald R Ashby
Born (1949-11-06)6 November 1949
Worcestershire, England
Died 17 December 2001(2001-12-17) (aged 52)
Worcestershire, England
Domestic
Years League Role
1982–1985 Football League Asst. referee
1985–1992 Football League Referee
1992–1998 Premier League Referee
International
Years League Role
1992–1994 FIFA listed Referee

Career edit

He became a Football League linesman in 1982, and three years later graduated to the referees' list at the age of thirty five. His breakthrough came when the retirement age for FIFA referees was reduced to 45. This created five vacancies on the English allocation for the FIFA List in 1992, and he was one of the officials to be promoted. At the same time, he became a member of the new Premier League list.

His first match in the new League was the 2–1 home victory by Leeds United over Wimbledon at Elland Road on 15 August 1992.

He only had three years as an international referee before he also reached FIFA's retirement age at the end of 1994. However, he was able to carry on in English football, and on 20 May 1995, at Wembley, he took charge of the FA Cup Final between Everton and Manchester United. Everton won the match 1–0 via a headed goal by Paul Rideout.[2]

He remained on the Premier League list until his retirement; his final match, on 3 May 1998, seeing champions Arsenal beat Everton 4–0 at Highbury.[3] He then became a Premier League referees' assessor.

Gerald Ashby died of a heart attack in December 2001.

References edit

Print edit

  • Football League Handbooks, 1982–1984.
  • Rothmans Football Yearbooks, 1985–1998.
  • 90 Minutes magazine, late 1991 (details of birthdate and profession)
  • Rothmans Football Yearbook, 2002–2003, p54 (notice of death), p956 (obituary)

Internet edit

  1. ^ Dates of birth and death confirmed: zerozero.eu website.
  2. ^ 1995 FA Cup Final Archived 2005-05-03 at the Wayback Machine: soccerbase.com website.
  3. ^ Last match in 1998: soccerbase.com website.

External links edit