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Furious Zico blasts ISL's refereeing standards

FC Goa's head coach Zico has lambasted the standard of refereeing in the Indian Super League, saying that he is "ready to pack up" and go home if his team is always subjected to what he feels are wrong decisions.

"I am here to help Indian football development and not to earn money," he said after Goa drew 1-1 against Atletico de Kolkata. "If they want me here I can be here to help but if they don't, I can pack my bags and leave."

Both teams were reduced to 10 men in the second half, and Zico's main complaint was against the red card shown to Sanjay Balmuchu, who was sent off after a second yellow.

"In the time we were the best in the game, the referee expelled one from Kolkata and they tried to balance it by expelling one from us. I don't know what is going on but in the three years I am here all the crucial goals are against us.

"It seems you want to finish my team. In the game against Pune, it was like this. Most crucial decisions are going against us," he said, referring to the 2-1 loss against FC Pune City.

Zico urged the organisers to bring reputed FIFA referees on board to raise the standard of the league.

"It's better that you get FIFA referees. Like you get good players to play, you can also get good referees so that Indian referees can learn from them. If they are from FIFA, then there is something wrong in FIFA."

Kolkata's coach Jose Molina also said some decisions were harsh, but he chose to play down the dubious refereeing decisions.

"I think the referee did not have a great night but well, things happen. We did not have a great match too. We cannot complain about the referee. He can have a bad day also," Molina said.

ATK went ahead in the sixth minute with Sameehg Doutie's strike, but their lead was cancelled by a spot kick from Jofre Gonzalez late in the second half, after Borja Fernandez was adjudged to have handled the ball.

"I did not see (the penalty incident) from the bench. I did not see on TV still. Borja told me that it was unlucky. He did not want to touch the ball and the ball touched the hand together with the body.

"It's very difficult to ask, at that moment we were playing really well, defending well, attacking with good situations and we had the game under control and victory in our hands. We can do nothing about that, only work."

Molina, however, stayed positive and said his side would utilise the the five days' break and try to bounce back in the match against Delhi Dynamos on October 22.

"The bad thing is we did not win, but the good thing is we did not lose. We will try to improve, there's much still to play," he said.