Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Leo Callaghan

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full name
  
Leo Callaghan

1954–1971
  
FIFA listed

Years
  
League

Name
  
Leo Callaghan

1954–1971
  
Football League

Role
  
Referee

Years
  
League


Leo Callaghan Leo Callaghan Referee

Born
  
5 February 1924 Merthyr Tydfil, Wales (
1924-02-05
)

Died
  
1987, Wales, United Kingdom

Shoutout to leo callaghan plus my first youtube video


Leo Callaghan (5 February 1924 – 8 January 1987) was an association football referee in the English Football League. He was also a Welsh FIFA referee.

Contents

Leo Callaghan Leo Callaghan Referee

Career

Callaghan was born in Merthyr Tydfil, Wales. He made the Football League referees list in 1954 at the age of thirty, and went on to have a seventeen-year career at this level. His greatest domestic honour came when he took charge of the 1968 FA Cup Final between West Bromwich Albion and Everton at Wembley. He is one of only three Welshmen to referee the Final (the others being Mervyn Griffiths and Clive Thomas).

He was also an international referee. This included two Group matches as linesman and one Group C match as referee (between Portugal and Hungary) at the 1966 World Cup Finals in England, as well as six matches in eleven years involving England in Home Internationals, and in European competitions, such as the 1968 UEFA European Football Championship qualifying rounds. On 11 June 1967 he took charge of Sweden versus Bulgaria in the Råsunda Stadium, Solna, in that competition. As regards club competitions, Callaghan was in charge of, for example, Atlético Madrid against FK Vojvodina in their second round second leg tie in the European Cup on 14 December 1966 at the Estadio del Manzanares, when the two-leg scores tied at 3–3, and the result had to be decided by a tie-break match a week later.

An extraordinary event occurred on 12 November 1970. Whilst refereeing a Football League Second Division match between Millwall and Sheffield United, the city of London was engulfed by "[t]orrential rain", causing the "abandonment of [the] game after 25 minutes by ... Callaghan ...".

He retired from the League list in 1971. He later became a Football League assessor.

References

Leo Callaghan Wikipedia