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Mike In The Middle

Mike In The Middle

Aaron Jones15 Apr 2019 - 18:00
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If you were ever asked to name an International Referee in Sport, who would it be?

Obviously very honoured to have been asked. The match and match day experience was amazing,
- Mike Keiley

Some of you may say the iconic Pierluigi Collins, whose piercing stares and staunt Italian expression collared the very best of the footballing world in the early 90's.

Alternatively, you may think of Welshman Nigel Owens. The diminutive yet charismatic rugby referee whose own line of catchphrases like "this is not football" and "if you don't like scrummaging, you’re in the wrong position" have seen him become of the most revered and favoured adjudicators across the globe. Some of you may be scratching your heads to think of even one.

However, one name I am sure you may never have heard of is Mike Keiley. (Pictured above in the yellow top)

Mike who calls Littleborough rugby club his home has as of last week (Saturday 13th April) become a recognised international referee. The 50-year-old officiated his first home international as England's Deaf side defeated Wales Deaf side to reclaim the Broadstreet Cup by a score of 22-6 at Sale FC's CorpArc Stadium.

Taking the spot as the match referee Mike Keiley played a part in an exciting double header that also saw England's Deaf Women narrowly succumb to a 30-nil loss to Sale 1861 at a packed Heywood Road.

Mr Keiley joined the Manchester and district referee society 10 years ago and in honour of his long and faithful service was given the helm and the whistle for the big occasion, much to his surprise.

When asked how he will adapt his game to suit the type of players he will be officiating..."Actually most of the players have restricted hearing. Only a couple of players are without hearing. They receive a tap on the shoulder from one of their own players when the whistle has gone. The touch judge is allowed to approach the player on the pitch if he feels they have missed the instruction..."

“. We have to exaggerate our normal hand signals and at scrum engagement I put one hand in between the front rows and pull it away to signal the engagement. Most of these players play normal rugby for their clubs, some at quite a high level. Ben Cohen, former England winger & World Cup winner, actually qualifies for the England dead team."

Days after I caught up with Mike again and once more the infectious smile was there for all to see: "Obviously very honoured to have been asked. The match and match day experience was amazing, I was very nervous before the game especially with it being streamed live, plus being mic’d up as well on the BBC.

"The guys where certainly competitive that English Welsh rivalry extended to amateurs. The game was close for about 60 minutes, but England were always the stronger team and scored two tries at the 65 min mark, this really killed off the game...

...There was a presentation after where new players are presented their international cap; me and the assistant referees received an international tie from both sides.

Adding that it was: "certainly educational as regards to some of the hurdles people with disabilities have, getting into mainstream sports. Deaf rugby wants to be refereed by everyday normal refs the only difference was the scrum, the idea is to integrate deaf or hearing-impaired players into mainstream rugby."

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