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Simba unhappy with derby ref

Simba Sports Club has expressed dissatisfaction over the appointment of referee Oden Mbaga who is supposed to officiate their first leg of the Mainland derby against archrivals Young Africans on Saturday.

A statement from the club’s information officer Ezekiel Kamwaga availed to the Guardian states that the club would not boycott the match but rather pay under protest.

The press releases states that Mbaga has previously shown weakness when he officiated a return leg derby during the previous season.

The statement goes on to highlight that Mbaga clearly showed confusion and incompetence when he at the first instance disallowed an equalising goal by Musa Mgosi before overturning the decision amid protest from players, fans and television replays.

Basing on that fault Simba will be fielding the team at the Stadium without confidence of the referee in terms of impartiality.

The statement did not suggest any other referee for the game but the selection of Mbaga stand as a pre-match fever for the club.

Mbaga is a FIFA approved referee who has been selected to officiate the match together with two other linesmen, match commissioner and referee assessor.

Mbaga will be assisted by two other linesmen Hamis Chang’walu and John Kanyenye, all sanctioned by FIFA.

Arusha-based Soud Abdi has been tasked with assessing the performance of the referee and linesmen during the derby.

Former national team player Mohamed Nyange will travel all the way from Dodoma for the task of match commissioner.

Simba are leading the pack of the 14-team league with 27 points, opening a six-point gap over archrivals Young Africans.

SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN

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Written by Israel Saria

I have been involved with sports in Tanzania as a Volleyball Coach for many years—and was a Tanzania Amateur Volleyball Association (TAVA) leader. I studied sports management at Leipzig University in Germany and understand the science behind sports. That led me to work as a football pundit, with the BBC ( Swahili service) in London. That experience and exposure took me to covering the 2010, World Cup in South Africa. This provided me with a great insight into international level football commentary and the opportunity to carry out extensive research into the game including its players, the stadiums, the rules and tactics.I have also been grateful to meet a wide range of people connected to football in the UK, Tanzania, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Ireland, France, Kenya etc, and visited almost all of the key football stadiums across United Kingdom, and Europe.

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