Lee Mason

Lee Stephen Mason (born 29 October 1971)[2] is a referee from Bolton, Greater Manchester. Since 2006, Mason has been on the list of Select Group Referees who officiate in the Premier League.[2]

Lee Mason
Mason issues a red card during a match in 2010
Full name Lee Stephen Mason[1]
Born (1971-10-29) 29 October 1971
Bolton, Lancashire, England
Domestic
Years League Role
1992–1996 North West Counties League Assistant referee
1996–1998 North West Counties League Referee
1998–2000 Football League Assistant referee
2000–2002 Premier League Assistant referee
2002–2006 Football League Referee
2006– Premier League Referee

Mason is a former chairman of the Bolton Referees' Society and is associated with the Lancashire County Football Association. His younger brother, Andy Mason, is a former professional footballer who was a trainee at Bolton Wanderers, and played professionally for Hull City among others, before ending up playing in Non-League.[3][4]

Education

Mason attended Thornleigh College in Bolton and then the Liverpool Institute of Higher Education between 1990 and 1993, living in Newman Hall, where he gained his degree. Whilst there he played for his college football team as well as being a regular compere, hosting a variety of social events at a students' union club.

Career

Mason took up the whistle in 1988, officiating in the Bolton Boys' Federation League. He previously worked in the car rental industry.[5] In 1992, he was added to the North West Counties Football League assistant referees' list, and progressed to referee in that league four years later. He was included on The Football League list of assistant referees in 1998, and was added to the Premier League assistant referees' list in 2000.

In 2002, he was promoted to referee in the Football League, and his first match at that level was a Third Division match between Shrewsbury Town and Exeter City in August 2002, won 1–0 by the home side.[6]

Also in 2002, he took charge of that year's FA County Youth Cup final between Birmingham and Durham, which Birmingham won 2–1.[7]

Mason became a Development Group referee in 2003, and finally reached the Premier League list of Select Group Referees in 2006. His first Premier League appointment came in February 2006, when Middlesbrough lost 4–0 at home to Aston Villa.[8]

Later in 2006, he was appointed to referee the Football League One play-off final between Barnsley and Swansea City at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium, which Barnsley won on penalties after a 2–2 draw after extra time.[9]

He was widely praised in the press following his handling of a League Cup tie between Chelsea and Manchester United in October 2012. The two teams had met three days prior in an incident-filled Premier League fixture which United won 3–2 and Chelsea had two players sent off. During the League Cup match, Mason correctly awarded three penalties and was required to interpret and handle a number of other incidents. Chelsea won 5–4 after a 90th-minute penalty for the Blues, who were previously 3–2 down, forced the Cup tie into extra-time.[5][10]

Controversy

In March 2015, Mason caused controversy in a 1–1 draw between A.F.C. Bournemouth and Cardiff City when he disallowed a goal scored by Bournemouth's Callum Wilson, who had had the ball kicked against his back by Cardiff goalkeeper Simon Moore, which then looped onto the crossbar before Wilson converted it into the unguarded net. Wilson was booked for a perceived foul, while commentators struggled to establish which rule had been broken.[11][12]

In December 2020, Mason was severely criticised by Wolves coach Nuno Espirito Santo after a loss to Burnley, as not up to the Premier League standard for referee, a fact that some have said has been proven following his subsequent performance in the recent Southampton vs Aston Villa game [13][14]

Statistics

SeasonGamesTotal per gameTotal per game
2002–0324943.9230.13
2003–04301183.9360.20
2004–05361083.0030.08
2005–0637902.4330.08
2006–0733872.6430.09
2007–08301103.6640.13
2008–09341323.8880.23
2009–10351063.0970.20
2010–11331354.0950.15
2011–1232802.5030.09
2012–13301073.5730.11

Statistics are for all competitions. No records are available prior to 2002–03.[15]

References

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