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Sam Spillane by Finbarr
Buckley |
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Sammy
Spillane was born and reared
in Evergreen Street in the
heart of Cork City. He
played schoolboy soccer, as
a right back, with Nicholas
Rovers. He then joined
Beaumont United before he
finally hung up his boots
playing for Anglesea United
and Morton.
His introduction to
refereeing was not totally
of his own design, as his
firm's representative on the
Inter-House League Committee
required him to referee any
outstanding games that may
have been arranged. He was
thrown into what turned out
to be a crunch match,
sending off four players
during the course of the
game. At the same time his
singing career was at it's
height and his decision to
stick with refereeing was to
pay dividends.
After affiliating to the
Munster Referee's
Association, Sammy soon
progressed from a League of
Ireland linesman to the
centre spot. He handled his
first match at Waterford,
where the home side played
Dundalk. On the Waterford
side that day was former
Republic of Ireland
international, Con Martin.
After the cup final in 1961,
his next major appointment
was a university
international at the Mardyke
involving Ireland and
England. His growing
reputation led him to handle
the League of Ireland
against the Irish League in
1962. After gaining his FIFA
badge in 1961, his first
taste of European action
came at Goodison Park in
October 1962, in the Inter
Cities Fairs Cup tie between
Everton and Dunfermline as a
linesman to Dublin referee
Jack Mehigan.
March 19th 1963 will live
forever in the memory of the
likeable Corkonian, as along
with his good friend
assistant referee, Sylvie Groeger, Sammy boarded a
plane for the first time.
They were off to Cardiff to
officiate at the European
Nations Cup tie between
Wales and Hungary on the
following night. Sammy
became the first Cork born
referee to handle such a
prestigious fixture and the
rave notices he and his
assistants justly received
travelled as far as the
Hungarian newspaper "NepSports".
Their London correspondent
wrote: "The control
exercised by the officials
impressed the Hungarians,
who freely declared
themselves to be perfectky
satisfied with them. Indeed,
while I was in Budapest only
a few weeks ago, both
players and officials of the
Hungarian national side
confirmed their admiration
at the way in which their
match in Cardiff was
controlled by the Irish
referee and linesmen. I
trust that in future Irish
football officials will be
given more opportunities to
display their skill on the
football fields of Europe,
and maybe even further
afield. It is indeed time
for the rest of Europe to
sit up and take notice of
Irish football."
The match ended in an
exciting one-one draw, with
Sammy needing to award a
penalty to either side. The
match was a defining moment
for Cork refereeing, as it
established it's officials
not alone nationally but
internationally.
Sammy continued to referee a
wide variety of matches,
from prestigious friendlies,
schoolboy internationals,
under-23 internationals to
further European club
competitions. However, his
love for local schoolboy
football was always dear to
his heart. Frank Casey, a
colleague of his through the
sixties, will never forget
his debt to schoolboy
football: "Once the nights
got long, Sammy, come hell
or high water, would always
make his way out to Togher
on Sunday evenings and
referee.
Sammy continued to referee
in local football through
the seventies and eighties,
before retiring in 1994. His
service to refereeing
spanned a remarkable
fifty-two years and his
involvement in six FAI
Senior Cup Finals, three as
a referee and three as
assistant is unlikely to be
ever repeated. During
Shamrock Rovers
unprecedented success in the
sixties, a trivia question
going around at the time
was: Who, other than a
Rovers player or mentor
appeared in Dalymount Park
as often. The answer of
course was Sammy Spillane.
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