| Full name | Benjamin Jon Williams | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Born | (1977-04-14)14 April 1977 (age 48) Canberra, Australia | ||
| Other occupation | Physical & outdoor education teacher | ||
| Domestic | |||
| Years | League | Role | |
| NSL | Assistant referee | ||
| 2005–2016 | A-League | Referee | |
| International | |||
| Years | League | Role | |
| 2005–2016 | FIFA listed | Referee | |
| 2005–2016 | AFC Elite | Referee | |
Benjamin Jon Williams (born 14 April 1977), better known asBen Williams, is a retired Australianfootballreferee.
Williams officiates in the Asian Champions League (ACL),[1] AFC Cup and in the AustralianA-League football competition. He has been aFIFA referee since 2005 and AFC Elite panel referee since 2006.
Williams has been selected to referee at the FIFA 2014 World Cup Brazil and is the only Australian referee to be selected.[2]
He was selected to officiate at the 2012 Asian Champions League (ACL) final in Korea between Ulsan Hyundai and Al Ahli.[3] He has officiated in theAFC Champions League since 2007.
In 2012, he was also selected to officiate 4 matches (2 as referee and 2 as 4th official) at the2012 Summer Olympics.[4] He officiated in the opening Great Britain match at Old Trafford against Senegal in front of approximately 75,000 spectators.[5]
He officiated at the 2013 FIFA U20 World Cup Turkey,[6]2010 FIFA Club World Cup and2011 AFC Asian Cup.
Williams debuted in the Hyundai A-League in Round 1, 26 August 2005 and at time of retirement, was the most experienced referee in the A-League. He refereed his 100th[7] match, Central Coast Mariners vs Adelaide United, atBluetongue Stadium in March 2012.
On 15 January 2014,FIFA announced that Ben Williams was selected as one of the 252014 FIFA World Cup officials. In preparation of the tournament Williams took six months off work to ensure he could focus on his training and preparation.[8] He was the first Australian referee appointed as the referee to a second-round game of a World Cup. He was also one of officials in2015 AFC Asian Cup.
On 22 July 2016, the Football Federation Australia announced that Williams would retire from refereeing after 22 years on the national panels and 12 years as a FIFA referee. Williams, in total, refereed 161 Hyundai A-League matches and 24 NSL matches throughout his career. He also refereed the 2015 Westfield FFA Cup final as well as international matches through the AFC and FIFA panels, including becoming the first Australian referee to officiate at a knockout match at a FIFA World Cup in 2014.[9]
Williams is currently the most experienced A-League referee having refereed 130 matches by the end of the 2013/2014 season.[10]
Guangzhou, China (3–25 November 2010)
Abu Dhabi, UAE (1–20 December 2010)
Doha, Qatar (7–29 January 2011)
During his refereeing career, Williams was a public high school teacher in theAustralian Capital Territory, where he has taught atMelba High School, Belconnen High School, andLyneham High School. In 2020 he was promoted to an executive position at the University of Canberra High School Kaleen where he continues to teach physical education.[28]