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Clattenburg claims Mourinho made him quit Premier League

Former Premier League referee, Mark Clattenburg, has claimed he quit refereeing in England, after a tirade by Manchester United manager, Jose Mourinho.

Clattenburg announced in February that he was leaving to become head of refereeing for the Saudi Arabian Football Federation.

The 42-year-old made his Premier League debut in 2004 and has singled out a fixture between Manchester United and Stoke City in January 2017, as the game that convinced him to depart.

Wayne Rooney broke Sir Bobby Charlton’s all-time scoring record for Manchester United to salvage a 1-1 draw, but Mourinho felt his team deserved more.

“I was refereeing the game when Wayne Rooney broke Bobby Charlton’s record and Mourinho came into my dressing room and he was unhappy about a handball penalty that I didn’t give,” Clattenburg told the Men in Blazers podcast.

“I’d walked off that pitch at Stoke, which was always the coldest stadium, it was always wet and miserable, and refereeing Man United was never an easy match.

“To come off that match it felt immense that I’d actually had a good performance, and for him to come into my dressing room and criticise my performance for a handball that I’d seen, that had clearly come off his chest, I knew that I was right but he’d put a seed of doubt into my mind.

“I drove home 250 miles thinking I’d made a big error, my wife knew my attitude had changed, and I thought to myself, ‘Do I really want to be a part of this anymore? Do I really want to referee?’ “And I went soul-searching, I wasn’t enjoying it as much as I used to and I had to get out.”

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