In a move that has sent ripples of mirth and despair across the footballing world, the Honourable Society of Blazers has decreed that David Artan, the man who once confused a linesman’s flag for a surrender flag, is to be stripped of his World Cup duties and handed the Uefa Super Cup like a participation trophy for incompetence. The news broke at roughly the same time as English refereeing standards were discovered cowering in a cupboard at St George's Park, muttering about VAR and the meaning of life.
Let us be clear, dear reader: this is not a punishment. This is a promotion. The Super Cup, that glittering trinket contested by teams who are still slightly hungover from their summer holidays, now becomes the stage for Artan’s particular brand of chaos. One can already picture him awarding a penalty for a gust of wind, or sending off a ball boy for unsporting behaviour. The man is a walking, whistling enigma wrapped in a tracksuit.
The question that now sits like a bad kebab in the collective gut of the nation is this: what does it say about British refereeing that Artan is not being sacked, but reassigned? It says that incompetence is not a fireable offence in the corridors of power. It says that if you fail upwards enough, you might just land in the Super Cup. It says that the FA’s disciplinary process is about as robust as a paper umbrella in a monsoon.
Let us examine the evidence. Artan’s last outing saw him award a goal from a corner that had clearly gone out for a throw-in. He then apologised via a strongly worded letter written on the back of a napkin. His VAR decisions have been described as “spontaneous” and “alternative-factual”. His positioning on the pitch is a mystery even to him. And yet, here he is, being handed the biggest club match in Europe like a golden ticket to Willy Wonka’s whistle factory.
The real story, as always, is the rot beneath the surface. British refereeing standards have been in decline since the days when Stanley Rous was a boy wearing a monocle and a woolly jumper. We have replaced common sense with a computer. We have replaced authority with committee. And now we have replaced accountability with a calendar of meaningless fixtures. Artan’s promotion is not an isolated incident; it is a symptom of a system that values hierarchy over honesty.
And so, as the Super Cup looms on the horizon, we must prepare ourselves for the inevitable. Artan will make a howler. He will book the wrong player. He will stop play to consult a pigeon. And afterwards, the Blazers will issue a statement saying that standards are being reviewed, and that Mr Artan has been awarded the World Cup final for services to mediocrity.
In the meantime, I shall be at the bar, raising a glass of airport gin to the beautiful chaos of it all. Cheers, David. You’ve earned it, in the same way a cat earns a spot on the sofa by shedding on it.








