RFEF President on Refereeing reform meeting – ‘We thank Real Madrid for their presence'
President of the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) Rafael Louzan has claimed that they are aiming for 'maximum transparency' and 'complete openness' when it comes to reform for the refereeing system. On Wednesday a meeting took place between the RFEF, the Referees Committee (CTA), La Liga, the elected clubs and Real Madrid.
Several weeks ago, amid controversy and numerous complaints, a vote took place between the clubs in top three tiers of Spanish football took elect representatives to the Referee Reform Committee, where Real Betis, Sevilla, Albacete and Granada were chosen from La Liga and Segunda. La Liga and the RFEF then chose to invite Real Madrid and Racing Santander of their own volition. Louzan promised changes ahead of next season.
'We have a clear horizon. To the extent we can, we will try to ensure that the model and this structural change can be implemented with the start of the next 2025/2026 season.'
Real Madrid have been the noisiest and most virulent in their complaints, calling the refereeing system corrupt and manipulated specifically against them. Yet General Manager Jose Angel Sanchez attended the meeting.
'We thank Real Madrid for their presence,' Louzan told Sport. 'We're at kilometer zero; this meeting has never happened before. We'll see how far we can go. There are regulations, rules, and a Sports Law. Everything has been put on the table. The English model, the German model, have already been discussed… Although none of them are perfect, there are complaints everywhere.'
Meanwhile one of the figures reportedly with their position under threat is head of the CTA, Luis Medina Cantalejo. He noted that they had not spoken about the constant smear pieces from official Real Madrid media.
'We haven't discussed anything about Real Madrid TV, nor anything in particular about any club.'
'Transparency has been requested. This is also true regarding referee appointments, which are made through a committee comprised of the federation, LaLiga, and the CSD. Or regarding the relegation and promotion of referees, how they are scored… Perhaps a committee should be set up to report on all of this.'

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Yahoo
39 minutes ago
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American Service Members Are Getting Real Sharing Their Thoughts On The Marines Being Sent Into LA
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Take the time to look this up if you aren't familiar with it." —RuralMNGuy (The Reichstag fire was a fire that burned down the Reichstag building, which housed the German parliament, in 1933. The origins of the fire remain unclear, but it became propaganda for Hitler's Nazi government, and he used it to issue the Reichstag Fire Decree, restricting free speech, freedom of the press, and allowing him to begin arresting members of the opposition parties.) 5."As a Marine vet, this fucking sucks. These kids are 18–22 years old and don't know shit about what the Constitution allows or what the Posse Comitatus Act is. They are taught enough not to harm an unarmed civilian, but decades of training for combating guerrilla warfare makes people jumpy. If protesters start throwing Molotov cocktails, or god forbid shooting, then shit gets real for these kids quick. I am afraid that if anything happens, it's going to put a black eye on the Corps that will never be forgotten by the American public." —Maikudono 6."As a vet, I will say it comes across as totalitarian. There is no reason to use active duty military against your own citizens. There's a great quote from Battlestar Galactica: 'The police and the military have always been separate for a reason. One serves and protects the people, the other fights enemies of the state. When the military does both, the enemies of the state tend to become the people.'" —Ok-Student7803 7."Army veteran and a SoCal native of 30 years here. Glad to see the president not allowing California to burn to the ground. Everyone knows the governor wasn't going to intervene." —ChinMuscle 8."Man, that makes me think of the saying 'When all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.' 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I hope those troops remember their oath to the US Constitution and to the people of the nation. I'm so disappointed with this whole situation." —Tacos_and_Yut 17."I think following the orders of a 34-count felon who is responsible for attacking the Capitol of the USA is reprehensible. I sincerely regret my service to the USA and wish I could take it back. It will not happen again." —TheDwellingHeart 18."I don't support violent protests. I also don't support Marines being used to quell said protests. Marines are a tool you use to destroy an area or group of people, not to peacefully resolve it. The guard makes more sense here, but the best answer is just keeping it at the police level." —Well__shit 19."GWOT [Global War on Terrorism] veteran here. This shit is absolutely wack. The United States has used the National Guard MANY times throughout its history, albeit for civil unrest or not. 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Yahoo
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Who is David Huerta, the California labor leader who was arrested in Los Angeles?
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