A number one soccer referee in Germany was awarded 48,500 euros ($52,800) in compensation on Wednesday after a court docket discovered he was discriminated in opposition to when he was now not thought of for video games due to his age.
The court docket in Frankfurt discovered the 49-year-old Manuel Gräfe, who officiated 289 Bundesliga video games from 2004 by 2021, had been deprived by the German soccer federation’s observe of not contemplating referees over the age of 47.
The court docket mentioned the federation, referred to as the DFB, was not justified in imposing a blanket restriction on older referees on the elite degree with out scientific proof or utilizing extra particular person measures like efficiency assessments.
However, the court docket rejected a declare for damages together with misplaced earnings, ruling that Gräfe had not supplied proof to indicate that he would nonetheless have been chosen for video games if the the age restrict had not been in place.
Football’s world governing physique FIFA determined in 2014 to abolish its age restrict for referees in worldwide video games. However, FIFA guidelines say referees over 45 can nonetheless be topic to “additional technical assessments as well as specific medical examinations and fitness testing on a case-by-case basis.”