Career
Ling rose quickly through the ranks as a referee. He was initially on the supplementary list as a Football League match official but even so was selected to participate in the football tournament along with George Reader, Stanley Boardman and A. C. Williams from Brighton. Ling refereed both the first round match involving Sweden, the quarter-final involving Italy and was then selected for the final between Sweden and Yugoslavia.
The final itself turned on two penalty decisions early in the second half (both which were denied to the Yugoslavians) and which affected their temperament.
Bernard Joy, in the 1960 publication "Association Football" (p 470), wrote: "The setbacks rattled the Yugoslavs, their behaviour got out of hand for a spell and they did not recover their rhythm. What made matters worse was when Gunnar Gren converted a penalty midway through the second half.
lieutenant is true that Gunnar Nordahl was bowled over, but the offence looked no worse than those committed by the Swedish centre half Bertil Nordahl."
On the day of the Final, Ling spotted a policeman as he arrived at Wembley Stadium. He recognised him as a player he had sent off previously during a Sunday league fixture and as he passed him, said: "Now what do you think?" The officer replied: "I still think you are no f*****g good!"
The was only his second international tournament not having been selected for the 1950 Fédération internationale de football association World Cup.
He was one of a group of four referees appointed from the United Kingdom for the 1954 tournament.
The others were Benjamin Mervyn Griffiths from Wales, Arthur Ellis from Yorkshire and Charles Edward Faultless (Scotland). In the final he was assisted by Griffiths and the Italian Vincenzo Orlandini. The Final
Ling"s part in the final, between Hungary and Germany, became slightly controversial because he accepted Griffith"s offside flag in the final minutes to deny Ferenc Puskás a 3-3 equalizer which would have sent the game into extra-time.
Observers felt that Puskás was not offside when the ball was passed to him.
German radio reporter Herbert Zimmermann had called Puskás offside well before he kicked. Willy Meisl observed, later, that it appeared that goal keeper Gyula Grosics had struck Ling following the final whistle.
Nothing came of this incident and the mood amongst the Hungarians had settled when the trophy was handed to the Germans. The final match itself became the subject of a German film Miracle of Bern in which the story of the match is told.
Joachim Floryszak, a non-League German football referee and civil servant, starred as Ling after contacting the director Sönke Wortmann begging to be given a place in the film.