Clément Turpin

French football referee (born 1982) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clément Turpin

Clément Turpin (French pronunciation: [klemɑ̃ tyʁpɛ̃]; born 16 May 1982)[1] is a French football referee. He has been a FIFA listed referee since 2010, and an UEFA Elite group referee since 2012.

Quick Facts Born, Height ...
Clément Turpin
Thumb
Turpin in 2016
Born (1982-05-16) 16 May 1982 (age 42)
Oullins, France
Height 1.76 m (5 ft 9 in)
Domestic
Years League Role
2006–2007 National Referee
2007–2009 Ligue 2 Referee
2008–present Ligue 1 Referee
International
Years League Role
2010–present FIFA listed Referee
Close

Career

Summarize
Perspective

Turpin became a FIFA referee in 2010.[2] He has served as a referee in the 2014[3] and 2018 World Cup qualifiers.[4]

He became a referee in UEFA club competitions from the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League.

In May 2016, Turpin was named the best French referee by the French Football Federation. The same year he officiated at the UEFA Euro 2016 in France[5] and was one of the five UEFA referees for the Men's Olympic Games football tournament in Brazil.[6]

The following year Turpin refereed in the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup in India.

On 29 March 2018, FIFA announced that Turpin would officiate at the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia, with Cyril Gringore and Nicolas Danos as assistant referees.[7]

On 4 July 2020, he officiated the Oldest capital derby of Bulgaria between Levski Sofia and Slavia Sofia.[8]

On 26 May 2021, he refereed the 2021 UEFA Europa League Final between Villarreal and Manchester United.[9]

Turpin was selected by UEFA to officiate the 2022 UEFA Champions League Final between Liverpool and Real Madrid.[10]

In April 2024, Turpin was selected to officiate at UEFA Euro 2024 in Germany.[11] The following year, Turpin was selected to officiate at 2025 FIFA Club World Cup in United States. [12]

Record

Major national team competition

More information UEFA Euro 2016 – France, Date ...
UEFA Euro 2016 – France
DateMatchVenueLocationRoundResultYellow cardsRed cards
14 June 2016 Austria HungaryNouveau Stade de BordeauxBordeauxGroup stage0–211
21 June 2016 Northern Ireland GermanyParc des PrincesParisGroup stage0–100
2018 FIFA World Cup – Russia
20 June 2018 Uruguay Saudi ArabiaRostov ArenaRostov-on-DonGroup stage1–000
27 June 2018  Switzerland Costa RicaNizhny Novgorod StadiumNizhny NovgorodGroup stage2–260
UEFA Euro 2020 – Europe
12 June 2021 Wales  SwitzerlandBaku National StadiumBakuGroup stage1–130
21 June 2021 Russia DenmarkParken StadiumCopenhagenGroup stage1–430
2022 FIFA World Cup – Qatar
24 November 2022 Uruguay South KoreaEducation City StadiumAl RayyanGroup stage0–030
29 November 2022 Ecuador SenegalKhalifa International StadiumAl RayyanGroup stage1–210
5 December 2022 Brazil South KoreaStadium 974DohaRound of 164–110
UEFA Euro 2024 – Germany
14 June 2024 Germany ScotlandAllianz ArenaMunichGroup stage5–131
25 June 2024 England SloveniaRheinEnergieStadionCologneGroup stage0–050
Close

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.