Mexico coach Miguel Herrera reacts during his side's loss to Netherlands on Sunday at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters / June 29, 2014
Mexico coach Miguel Herrera reacts during his side's loss to Netherlands on Sunday at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters / June 29, 2014
Mexico coach Miguel Herrera reacts during his side's loss to Netherlands on Sunday at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters / June 29, 2014
Mexico coach Miguel Herrera reacts during his side's loss to Netherlands on Sunday at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. Marcelo Del Pozo / Reuters / June 29, 2014

Mexico’s Herrera fumes over ‘fouls that don’t exist’ and referee who 'left us outside'


  • English
  • Arabic

Mexico coach Miguel Herrera blamed referee Pedro Proenca for his side's last 16 World Cup exit on Sunday after his decision to award a stoppage-time penalty allowed the Netherlands to seal a thrilling 2-1 comeback victory.
With two minutes to play Mexico led 1-0 but Wesley Sneijder equalised with a fierce drive before captain Rafael Marquez was judged to have tripped Arjen Robben and Klaas Jan Huntelaar calmly scored to put the Dutch in the quarter-finals.
Click here to visit The National's World Cup 2014 landing page
"It seems to me the reason (we lost) was the referee, the man with the whistle. He left us outside the next stage of the World Cup," Herrera told reporters.
"If the referee starts marking fouls that don't exist, you leave the World Cup to circumstances out of your hands. We expect the referee committee to take a look at that and that this gentleman goes home, just like us."
With victory in their grasp on a scorching afternoon at the Castelao arena, the defeat was a particularly sore one for Mexico who have reached the last 16 at six consecutive World Cups and have lost every time.
"It's a World Cup where everything was against Mexico... Out of the four matches that we had, three of them were referee disasters... Unfortunately we didn't achieve what we wanted," Herrera said.
The Mexico boss was perhaps understandably prickly about the officiating going into the game after his side had two goals harshly disallowed in their opening match against Cameroon, and a strong penalty appeal turned down against Croatia.
He said the spot kick for the Dutch could also have been avoided had Robben been booked for diving earlier in the game, suggesting the winger may not have risked going down so easily under the challenge of Marquez for the late penalty.
"He dived three times, he should have cautioned him the first time," said Herrera, who also questioned why Portugal's Proenca had been selected for the game, suggesting a referee from Africa, Asia or South America would have been fairer.
"I'm happy and calm about the performance of the boys... We'd done really well. Then the team sits back and we start to give chances to a team that had not done anything.
"(But) with the assistance of the referee they came up with this result that takes (the Netherlands) to the next stage.
"We will leave tomorrow or the day after. We hope that referee does as well."
Follow us on Twitter @SprtNationalUAE

Indoor Cricket World Cup

Venue Insportz, Dubai, September 16-23

UAE squad Saqib Nazir (captain), Aaqib Malik, Fahad Al Hashmi, Isuru Umesh, Nadir Hussain, Sachin Talwar, Nashwan Nasir, Prashath Kumara, Ramveer Rai, Sameer Nayyak, Umar Shah, Vikrant Shetty

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

Read part four: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part one: how cars came to the UAE