
Players and fans alike were left feeling as sick as a parrot during a Hertfordshire Senior Centenary Trophy tie, which descended into farce thanks to the attendance of an exotic bird.
Referee, Gary Bailey was forced to make the extraordinary decision to
send parrot 'Me-Tu' - who often watches matches from the confines of
his cage - from the touchline during a tense cup tie between Hatfield
Town and Hertford Heath, after the feathered friend persistently
imitated the man in the middle's whistle.
The Senegalese bird's actions continually forced players from both
sides to stop play, resulting in the parrot's owner, 66-year-old Irene
Kerrigan, being asked to take the bird away.
"I’ve never known anything like it in my career," Bailey told Metro.
"It was a big game and there were quiet a lot of people there. "Every
time I blew my whistle, the bird made the same sound. The players all
stopped so I had to ask to move the parrot to the stands. I’ve sent a
few people off in my time but never a parrot."
"I suppose if you can take a dog to the ground, you can take your pet
parrot," added Hatfield Town Chairman Ted Collie. "If I hadn’t been
there, I wouldn’t believe it."
Nevertheless, owner Kerrigan won't hesistate in taking the bird to
future games, but may be tempted to stay in the stands, steering clear
of the touchline and the referee's wrath.
"Me-Tu loves his football and I’ll take him there again," Kerrigan told The Sun.