WHATEVER else he does in his career, Les Mottram knows that he will
have to live with the mistake that has become a part of Scottish
football folklore, the day at Firhill when he didn't give a goal after
the ball went into the net and back out again.
It has become far more notorious a miss than anything Ally McCoist,
Mark Hateley, et al have achieved in careers spent missing more than a
few goals. Yet the only Scots referee who was considered good enough for
the World Cup in the US last year has learned to shrug his shoulders and
accept the inevitable.
It says a great deal for his resilience that this one-time Airdrie
player has taken all the slings and arrows that followed his error three
years ago and gone on to become the country's No.1 ref.
It is perhaps no great surprise that Mottram, who will have the job of
keeping the peace and trying to ensure Scotland's showpiece cup final
today will be worthy of the occasion, has been able to come out from
behind the wagons after his faux pax. Anybody who takes on the task of
the referee in the professional game knows that a hard skin has to be
grown, cultivated and regularly renewed if he has to have any chance of
surviving in the ultimate sporting exercise for masochists.
Mottram has an interesting answer to that oft-asked question about
refs. Why do it when all you get is stick? He points out that nobody
ever goes into the business thinking that he will get to the
high-profile status that brings the raspberries, the taunts, and the
abuse which is life at the top for the men in the middle.
Mottram, who is head of the technical department at Calderhead High
School, Shotts, played football for Airdrie Academy before he was asked
to sign for Airdrie, where his professional career began and ended.
Mottram (''I was a skilful defender who played keepy-uppy with
players'') spent two years at Broomfield before being given a free
transfer and never quite made it to a first-team place.
He was reinstated to Junior level where, during the next decade, he
played for a whole collection of teams, including Shotts Bon Accord,
Thornliewood, Armadale, Bathgate, and Forth. It was after his playing
days ended that he meandered into refereeing, via schools football. That
came after he had trained as a design draughtsman at Honeywell but
hankered after the teaching profession and eventually started in
Caldervale School in Airdrie before moving to his current post 13 years
ago.
''When I started taking school teams I found that half the time I had
to referee them as well and I thought I might as well take the exam and
see what happened. It has just gone from there. At the end of the day we
all love football and this is a way of being involved.''
He has a quiet pride in reaching the top as a middleman, particularly
representing his country in the USA last summer. At 44, he has six years
left to referee in Scotland but comes off the FIFA list in December,
1996. ''I will have to think about what to do after that. You get used
to the foreign travel and the exciting appointments, but if I feel fit
enough and enthusiastic enough I will probably still go on. I intend to
take it as it comes.''
Mottram will not be able to follow his normal Saturday routine --
breakfast, a mid-morning coffee and a general relaxation before kick-off
time. ''I can't do that this week, because there is a pre-final lunch at
a hotel in Glasgow with the supervisors, which has become the cup-final
routine. It means that I will have to sit and pick at a lunch that I
don't really want to eat, but I understand why it is done. They are
trying to make it an occasion for everyone.''
The appointment to the final, his first, means a great deal to the
articulate Mottram as he sees it as a recognition from his own country
and, in any case, it is the peak appointment for any referee in
Scotland.
He will go into each dressing room before the game this afternoon,
check their studs and have a wee bit banter with them. ''There will be
no particular instructions. They know me, I know them. I won't be
pontificating. They should know the laws of the game and they know how I
referee. It will be a case of wishing them good luck and getting on with
it.''
He belongs to the school of thought that believes communication
between referee and players is paramount. ''As long as the players
accept that you will have a wee word with them occasionally, it will be
fine, but if they ignore you then you have to act.
''I hope Peter Grant is playing for a start. He is one you can talk to
in the middle of the park, and some of the Airdrie players are quite
sociable, shall I say.
''Professionals are professionals. They have a job to do and I suppose
it depends if it is their nature to talk to you. I think if we can get
things sorted out with a few words it can prevent disciplinary action
later.''
Mottram, who knows that the first question he will be asked when he
appears on a sports panels will be about that goal scored by Dundee
United which he didn't see. ''I have got used to that now but all I can
say is that it was a mistake, but it was an honest one.
''If I could go back now and give Dundee United a goal I would but I
have to hold my hands up. My conscience is clear. I didn't cheat anyone
or do anything dishonest. If you come away from a game knowing that you
did everything honestly you can go back on to the football field. Baresi
didn't become a bad player by missing a penalty in the World Cup
final.''
The fact that he was once a player for Airdrie may worry some folk
concerned about neutrality in the final, but Mottram dismisses those
notions. ''I have refereed Airdrie many times and there is no chance of
any bias on my part. Apart from the fact that it was a long time ago
when I was with them, I have a simple philosophy about our job. Referees
don't think, they react, and in that context colours mean nothing.''
Mottram will receive #300 for his big-day appearance, almost #200 more
than the League pay for the weekly grind, but money could never be a
motivating factor for this rare group of men.
He has no great ambitions. ''I never really had any to begin with,
although I did want to become Class 1. Once that was achieved I was
quite happy. In this business you never know what is coming next so it
is best not to be ambitious. Saturday could be my last game. It has
happened to players and referees before me.''
Calderhead High School has been a home from home for the Mottrams. His
wife, Joy, is a PE teacher there, daughter Sarah has just left to start
Edinburgh University, and son Christopher is a pupil there.
All of them will be there to see dad in action at Hampden, but if
there was any danger of Les being overcome by self-esteem as he
approaches his biggest moment his mother, as mums will, removed it
efficiently.
''I told her about me and the final and asked if she would like to be
there. She said 'yes', but a few days later she called me back to say
she couldn't. 'I forgot,' she said, 'it is the Women's Guild trip to
Aberdeen.' ''
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