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[Albion] Dunk - straight red?



Seagull58

In the Algarve
Jan 31, 2012
8,505
Vilamoura, Portugal
I've warned you privately, and now I'm warning you publicly. Post things about officials on here that you can't back up and you'll be banned.

I've absolutely no doubt that PGMOL will check the social media and message boards of the competing clubs. If they take objection to something that clearly cannot be proven in any way, you'll be gone before NSC is.

Capiche?
The evidence suggests the referees are incompetent and/or other factors are in play to explain their inconsistency. We see it in virtually every game. Nothing libellous there. Taylor dishing out the first red card for foul and abusive language in the prem for 12 years is an indication that competent consistency is not on the menu.
 
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Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
25,909
Once in 15 years in the EPL? Doesn't appear to be very "that's it", does it? More like it's not Bruno Fernández or Virgil Van Dijk or Romero or Gallagher or Trippier or Ashley Young or any other player but it's Lewis Dunk and his manager doesn't like me, plus I've completely lost control so I'm going to brandish a red for once in my career when a player accurately describes me.
Alternatively, if you look at the footage and apply basic lip reading it's clear why Taylor was having none of it.

Whilst I might challenge the competency of the Forest penalty decision, I find it hard how any defence is offered on Dunk's sending off. As I said, if it was a Forest player most of the consternation would be absent and folk would be saying 'quite right'.
 


hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
62,759
Chandlers Ford
The bookings against West Ham and Villa were for fouls according to the match day timelines on Sky Sports. The Luton timeline just says Mitoma is shown a yellow card, doesn’t say why.
I recall one of the fouls - he was dribbling towards the edge of the South stand penalty area - the ball got away from him a bit, and he lunged in after it, catching the defender as he cleared the ball.

The one that wasn't a foul, was for lashing the ball into the away crowd behind the goal, after the (offside?) whistle had gone.
 


Seagull58

In the Algarve
Jan 31, 2012
8,505
Vilamoura, Portugal
Alternatively, if you look at the footage and apply basic lip reading it's clear why Taylor was having none of it.

Whilst I might challenge the competency of the Forest penalty decision, I find it hard how any defence is offered on Dunk's sending off. As I said, if it was a Forest player most of the consternation would be absent and folk would be saying 'quite right'.
Understood. Why has neither Taylor nor any other EPL ref applied the same punishment on any other occasion in the last 12 years? Was he uniquely offended by the word "bald"?
 


Joey Jo Jo Jr. Shabadoo

I believe in Joe Hendry
Oct 4, 2003
12,063
I recall one of the fouls - he was dribbling towards the edge of the South stand penalty area - the ball got away from him a bit, and he lunged in after it, catching the defender as he cleared the ball.

The one that wasn't a foul, was for lashing the ball into the away crowd behind the goal, after the (offside?) whistle had gone.
I remember the lunge challenge now you mention it. And the Luton one being for kicking the ball away would be right for early in the season when they were actually issuing bookings for that.
 




beardy gull

Well-known member
Jul 18, 2003
4,125
Portslade
”Mr VAR” aka Dale Johnson thinks VAR were wrong to intervene.
VAR review: Just because two players may have been held doesn't mean they are both offences. Earlier in the second half, Brighton's João Pedro was held back by Chris Wood and a penalty was awarded, so for this reason Nottingham Forest were adamant they should have a spot kick too for the holding of Hudson-Odoi.

Holding is an assessment of impact upon an opponent, and not just the act itself. Wood has his arm around the chest of Pedro, just as Marc Cucurella did on Erling Haaland for the penalty Taylor awarded to Manchester City at Chelseabefore the international break. It's not going to be overturned.
Would the VAR have advised a penalty for Hinshelwood's challenge if there hadn't been a similar one earlier in the game? Perhaps not. However, as we have discussed, the VAR's job isn't to provide consistency of decision-making by a referee, and there doesn't appear to be a clear act of holding by Hinshelwood.

The argument that if you give the first one you have to give the second only holds if they are identical incidents, and it would have been better had the VAR not intervened. If the independent panel comes to the same conclusion, it would be the fourth incorrect VAR decision to go against Brighton this season.
 




portslade seagull

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2003
17,948
portslade
When I reffed many years ago I used to give one warning for swearing to each team and then yellowed any culprits. Spitting was my pet hate especially when aimed at opposing players and was a straight red. Problem was the younger players used to copy what they watched in televised matches on TV.
 




Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
25,909
Understood. Why has neither Taylor nor any other EPL ref applied the same punishment on any other occasion in the last 12 years? Was he uniquely offended by the word "bald"?
It looks rules have been tightened.

The point is abusive language has to have zero tolerance where refs are concerned.

We've seen the problem at grassroots level. So the highest level has to set an example. If it doesn't, then there won't be any referees left.
 


loz

Well-known member
Apr 27, 2009
2,482
W.Sussex
When I reffed many years ago I used to give one warning for swearing to each team and then yellowed any culprits. Spitting was my pet hate especially when aimed at opposing players and was a straight red. Problem was the younger players used to copy what they watched in televised matches on TV.
Also calling a ref or opposing player a cheat is a red card if I remember rightly from my refereeing days…although that might have changed from 35 years ago ?
 


portslade seagull

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2003
17,948
portslade
Calling the ref a cheat was a red. The offences in lower local league footie seemed to mirror what the youngsters watched on TV. I can't remember ever being surrounded by players effing and jeffing due to what they classed as a dodgy decision. The more respect professionals show to refs the more it would ripple down the pyramid
 




Si Gull

Way Down South
Mar 18, 2008
4,687
On top of the world
It looks rules have been tightened.

The point is abusive language has to have zero tolerance where refs are concerned.

We've seen the problem at grassroots level. So the highest level has to set an example. If it doesn't, then there won't be any referees left.
Absolutely right that there should be zero tolerance for abusive language but, if that's the case, it has to be applied consistently. The problem with Dunk's dismissal is that it looks like he was made an example of, and that's a poor reflection on the referee and might be seen as vindictive, in the light of RDZ'S recent comments about referees. A real mess.
 


BluesRockDJ

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2020
1,299
Everybody feels their own club is harder done by than any other. It's one of the side effects of football being a sport followed largely by manbabies who increasingly believe they have no agency in a rapidly diversifying and less easily understandable world (and that's not a criticism btw as I'm just as guilty of this myself).

That said, was the player in the Spurs-Villa game swearing in front of the ref or directly calling the ref a bad word? There's a big difference. A mate of mine briefly reffed Sussex Sunday League games a decade or so ago (and won ref of the year in his first season). He rarely booked and never sent anyone off for randomly effing and blinding about stuff (and effed and blinded back with them) but the first and only guy to say "you're a c**t, ref" to him got a straight red and (Sussex FA imposed) three month ban.

There's a big difference re whether swearing is directed at the situation (the air, the decision, the general sense of exasperation etc) or specifically at the person with the whistle. I'm not saying that's the key difference between McGinn and Dunk today (as I have seen neither incident even via video) but I rather suspect it might be tbh.
Sorry mate, but this was not a Sunday League match........................who else would he have been effing and blinding at ?
 


BluesRockDJ

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2020
1,299
Now I'm not an expert lip reader but I'm fairly sure I saw Youri Tielemans call Rob Jones "f***ing shit" yesterday to his face. I genuinely can't see the difference unless bald is now the offensive word we all should refrain from saying.
Inforces the fact that so many overeseas players soon pick up on English expletives !
 




BluesRockDJ

Well-known member
Jan 24, 2020
1,299
Maybe the F word is deemed slightly less offensive than the C word.

but I can remember rugby at school nearly 60 years ago (hated it) - any arguing with the referee and you’re sent off.
maybe football should do the same. And it is the inconsistency that jars!
Yawn..............................................................
 


METALMICKY

Well-known member
Jan 30, 2004
6,823
Now I'm not an expert lip reader but I'm fairly sure I saw Youri Tielemans call Rob Jones "f***ing shit" yesterday to his face. I genuinely can't see the difference unless bald is now the offensive word we all should refrain from saying.
You may jest but in this 'woke' world we now live in where everyone is reserving the right to be insulted about not much this might be the case. You now have to say ' follicly challenged ' :)
 


kevo

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2008
9,801
”Mr VAR” aka Dale Johnson thinks VAR were wrong to intervene.
If the independent panel comes to the same conclusion, it would be the fourth incorrect VAR decision to go against Brighton this season.
No surprise there. How many did we have against us last season?
 






Mellotron

I've asked for soup
Jul 2, 2008
32,468
Brighton
Then we have a problem if ”oh fcuk off Ref” going to be a red card dissent - you’d end up with less than 7 players on at least one of the teams and the match would have to be abandoned. I think were are long past the time when ‘fcuk off ref’ was a straight red card offence - a yellow yes, or verbal warning but not a sending off (FFS 😂)
My point is that for some reason screaming f*** off is apparently fine. It shouldn’t be. It’s never even a yellow.
 


Leekbrookgull

Well-known member
Jul 14, 2005
16,384
Leek
Mark my words because ifs it's not been said before with both Match officials and Var pulling in different directions and football where passions can run high it's only a question of time before a match official is seriously assaulted.
 


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