Wendy Toms

Wendy Toms
Full name Wendy Ann Toms[1]
Born (1962-10-16) 16 October 1962 (age 62)[1]
Dorset, England
Other occupation Parcel post manager
Domestic
Years League Role
1994–1997 Football League Asst. referee
1996–present Football Conference Referee
1997–2005 Premier League Asst. referee
International
Years League Role
2000–2005 FIFA listed (women) Referee

Wendy Ann Toms (born 16 October 1962) is an English former football referee from Broadstone, Dorset[2] who has officiated in the Football League and then the Premier League, both as an assistant referee. She was the first female ever to fulfil such roles at those levels.[3] She also served for FIFA on the women's international list.[4] Her other occupation is as a parcel post manager.[5]

Career

Toms took up refereeing in the late 1980s,[6] and progressed to become a reserve (now "fourth") official in the Football League in 1991 for the AFC Bournemouth versus Reading match in the old Third Division, which was then unique for a female.[3] She was the first woman to be included on the list of Football League assistant referees when she was chosen for the 1994–95 season,[3] and became a referee in the Football Conference two seasons later,[3] creating another precedent when she took charge of the game between Kidderminster and Nuneaton Borough her first Conference match as referee. Almost a year after that, she operated as an assistant referee in the Premier League, again, the first female ever to do so.[3]

Two years after her debut in that league, and having 'run the line' for referee Steve Dunn during Leeds United's 4–3 Premiership away win at Coventry City on 11 September 1999,[7] she was roundly criticised by the then Coventry manager, Gordon Strachan, who said in an interview with The Independent newspaper: "We are getting PC decisions about promoting ladies. It does not matter if they are ladies, men or Alsatian dogs. If they are not good enough to run the line they should not get the job. Saturday's was the worst assistant refereeing decision I have seen this season by far and I've said that in my report. The fourth Leeds goal was offside by at least four yards and there were numerous other bad decisions in the game. My message is don't be politically correct and promote people just for the sake of it." However, the president of the Referees' Association at the time, Peter Willis, replied: "She's a very good official...I think the situation is very sad. As a manager of a football club, Strachan is responsible for his players and he is entitled to his opinion on the performance of the officials, but to talk about the sex of the official is irrelevant."[4]

Toms' highest domestic honour was being appointed as an assistant for the Football League Cup Final between Leicester City and Tranmere at Wembley on 27 February 2000,[8] when the referee was Alan Wilkie. Leicester won this 2–1, with Toms indicating offside at one point to cause the Tranmere (and former Leicester) player David Kelly's "equalising goal" to be disallowed.[9] She was also an assistant referee in two matches at the 2000 Olympic Games,[6] having been selected by FIFA to operate on their women's international list.[4]

She took charge of the UEFA Women's Cup quarter-final first leg on 30 October 2003 between Brøndby IF of Denmark and Gomrukçu Baku of Azerbaijan, with the Danish side running out 9–0 winners.[10]

Toms refereed one match at the 2005 UEFA Women's Championship in England. This was the Group B match at Deepdale in Preston on 6 June 2005, between France and Italy, which finished 3–1 to the French.[11]

Although no longer officiating at the highest level, Toms still referees in the Football Conference.[12]

Wendy Toms was also named in derogatory fashion during the Richard Keys and Andy Gray rant regarding women officiating elite football matches in late 2010, which cost the two broadcasters their jobs.[13]

References

  1. ^ a b Wendy Toms at Olympedia (archive) Edit this at Wikidata
  2. ^ Town of residence[permanent dead link]: confirmed in a match report at the Pitts Family website.
  3. ^ a b c d e Date of first Conference match as referee Archived 18 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, 31 August 1996 (also list of her other "firsts"): M. Gratton's Ladies First website.
  4. ^ a b c Gordon Strachan's criticism of Toms, also FIFA status confirmation: article at The Independent website, via the FindArticles service.
  5. ^ Woking v. Telford, first Conference match as referee, 1996 (also other occupation): article at The Independent website, via the FindArticles service.
  6. ^ a b Referee since late 1980s, plus other career information: ThisIsHampshire.net website.
  7. ^ Match details, Coventry v. Leeds, 1999: soccerbase.com website.
  8. ^ League Cup Final 2000, match details: soccerbase.com website.
  9. ^ League Cup Final 2000, detailed report: article from The Independent website, via the FindArticles service.
  10. ^ UEFA Women's Club Championship, referee for a quarter-final in 2003: RSSSF.com statistical website.
  11. ^ Women's Euro 2005, referee for France v. Italy: zerozero.eu website.
  12. ^ Still refereeing (Football Conference 2007): Guardian Unlimited website.
  13. ^ Sky Sports' Keys and Gray, naming Wendy Toms on air: Telegraph.co.uk.

See also