Glenn Nyberg
Glenn Nyberg (born 12 October 1988) is a Swedish football referee. He became a professional referee in 2008, has been an Allsvenskan referee since 2013 and a full international referee for FIFA since 2016. Refereeing careerNyberg has been refereeing matches in the Swedish Fotbollsallsvenskan since October 2013 . Since 2016, he has been on the FIFA list of referees and has officiated international football matches. On 11 June 2023, Nyberg was selected to referee 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup final between Uruguay and Italy in Argentina. On 9 April 2024, Nyberg refereed the first leg of UEFA Champions League quarter final knockout tie between Arsenal and Bayern Munich but he was criticized by Bayern Munich's coach Thomas Tuchel for not awarding his team a penalty when opposition player Gabriel Magalhães deliberately caught a ball with his hands during normal play. Tuchel claims Nyberg justified his decision saying he did not want to punish a "kid's mistake" by Magalhães. At the end of the match, Nyberg was confronted by Arsenal's Bukayo Saka for not awarding a late penalty after Saka collided with Bayern Munich goalkeeper Manuel Neuer in the box.[1] In the same month, Nyberg was selected to officiate at the Men's Olympic Games football tournament in Paris. Weeks later, he was also selected to officiate at UEFA Euro 2024 in Germany.[2] [3] The following month, he was appointed by UEFA as the fourth official for Europa Conference League final between Olympiacos and Fiorentina.[4] At the 2024 Summer Olympics, Nyberg was assigned the opening Group B match between Argentina and Morocco. The match was interrupted by a late pitch invasion after Cristian Medina scored an equaliser but two hours later, after the pitch invasion was cleared, Nyberg disallowed Medina's goal. The match was resumed behind closed doors and resulted in a 2–1 win for Morocco.[5] Personal lifeNyberg worked various jobs before becoming a referee such as a warehouse worker and a supply teacher. Nyberg's father was an assistant referee. He had a brother (who is an assistant referee in the Swedish league) and two half-sisters. [6][7] See alsoReferences
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