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Kim Milton Nielsen (born August 3, 1960 in Copenhagen, Denmark) is a former international football referee. An IT manager by trade,〔 Jesper Victor Larsen, (Kim Milton Nielsen: Ham i sort! ), ''Krop & Sport'', vol. 2, 2006〕 Nielsen is noted for his impressive height of 1.96m, making him taller than most players. Nielsen began refereeing at 15 years of age, as he wanted to know the Laws of Football.〔 A decade later, he began taking charge of Danish top-flight games, and he was awarded his FIFA international badge in 1988 when he was still in his late 20s. His career includes 154 internationals and 53 UEFA Champions League games.〔 In 1993, he earned his first major UEFA call-up for the UEFA Super Cup first leg between SV Werder Bremen and FC Barcelona. An appointment for a final followed the next year - the 1994 UEFA Cup final first leg between SV Austria Salzburg and Inter Milan. Nielsen refereed the Russia-Germany match at UEFA Euro 96 in England, and followed this up with duty at the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France. He took charge of two matches, including the clash between England and Argentina in Saint-Étienne, where he is remembered for sending off England's David Beckham for kicking out at Argentina's Diego Simeone after the Argentinian had fouled him. England went on to lose the match on penalties, and Beckham was blamed and vilified by the English tabloids for causing the loss as a result of his sending-off. He was noted as the newsmaker of June 1998 on the BBC website where he gave his thoughts about the match and Beckham's sending off.〔(June: The England-Argentina referee ), ''BBC News'', December 22, 1998〕 At UEFA Euro 2000, Nielsen was put in charge of the Germany-Romania and Turkey-Belgium encounters, although the latter match ended in disappointment as he was forced out of the competition with a leg injury.〔(Referee Nielsen forced out of finals ), ''BBC Sport'', 20 June 2000〕 He was replaced by Günter Benkö. The 2002 FIFA World Cup represented another milestone, as he officiated the semi-final between Brazil and Turkey. He received another accolade after being appointed as the referee for the 2004 UEFA Champions League Final between AS Monaco and Porto at the Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen. He was on duty in Portugal as one of the 12 UEFA Euro 2004 referees. His performance during the 2004-05 UEFA Champions League quarterfinal between PSV Eindhoven and Olympique Lyonnais sparked controversy, as several players and officials of Lyon heavily criticized several decisions, most notably a forgotten penalty on the Brazilian forward Nilmar. Lyon's president, Jean-Michel Aulas, complained about different gifts and accolades Nielsen allegedly received from Dutch officials.〔("Aulas accuse !" ''Le Parisien'', 15 April 2005 )〕 Nielsen attracted further controversy in a 2005–06 UEFA Champions League group stage match between Spanish side Villarreal and Manchester United, when he immediately showed a second yellow card and sent off Manchester United's Wayne Rooney for sarcastically clapping in his face after he had initially been shown a yellow card. 'Even sarcastic play is not allowed, the referee cannot accept that,' Nielsen said of his decision to BBC Radio 5 Live.〔(Nielsen stands by Rooney red card ), ''BBC Sport'', 16 September 2005〕 In 2005, Nielsen reached the FIFA regulated age limit of 45. He ended his refereeing career on May 16, 2006, following the last game of the Danish Superliga championship. ==References== 〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kim Milton Nielsen」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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