Ernest
Stupid IDIOT
And it won't be rescinded as we could then ask for a replay etc
And it won't be rescinded as we could then ask for a replay etc
No we couldn't.
I see he has been given the last ever game at Upton Park on Tuesday v Man U
With the money involved anything could happen and the FL wouldn't want to chance it
They could always ask us to SING away any WRITES to this. Better to be RIGHT than LEFT
Can anyone enlighten me as to why the referee would defer to his assistant when the referee was only four or five yards away?
Having come to terms with the decision I cannot understand Mike Dean's actions or thought processes at all. When you brandish a straight red you are ending a player's season with three crucial matches remaining.
It just seemed to be a series of incoherent reactions - picking the wrong card, doing nothing when it was knocked out of his hand then not picking it up, not waving the players away, calling on the linesmen for judgement when he was nowhere near the incident and not fit to make such a crucial call, then looking at the blood and showing a straight red. Totally bizarre bit of refereeing.
It was certainly this when we look at what happened. There was also the moment just before when Stephens was pissed off with one of their players for trying to win a free kick without being touched, and the ref had to chat to them both to calm them down. The two incidents were unrelated but it could have looked like a carry on, so add the nasty gash on top of it as a shock factor the ref got caught up in the moment.
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That was Ramierez, same player. Dean probably thought that Stephens was going for a bit of 'afters' as they were going at each other a few times on the pitch and he had that word a min beforehand.
On the goal, Curbishley made a point that it should have been offside. Stuani was offisde when the ball was played, but he wasn't when he scored. However the fact that he was offiside gave him that extra half a yard over our defenders and made him first to the ball to tap it in. Therefore he was using his offisde position to gain an advantage = offside.
He also said it was a yellow card tackle, no way a red.
Personally, I think he's lying if he says the linesman told him to give the red card. As you say, why would you defer to someone further away when you are so close to an incident. It makes no sense. He saw the gash, reacted to Ramirez's actions and changed his mind and now won't admit it. Sad really.
Can anyone enlighten me as to why the referee would defer to his assistant when the referee was only four or five yards away?
Field of vision. If you're standing that close you can't necessarily see everything that's going on "in perspective". Also why linesmen quite often cock up offsides and line calls two yards in front of them.
You TORIES know all about FRAUD
Surprised to see that Jonathan Douglas, who plays for Ipswich, received no card at all for the challenge that left Derby's George Thorne with a double break.
It's almost as if the referee judged the challenge on merit rather than the resultant injury.
Either that or he didn't "Look at his leg, look at his leg, look at his leg."
Similar to the Calderon red card v Newport a couple of years ago. The broken leg was caused by the player tackling Calde, but Calde got sent off due to the nature of the injury
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The live commentary were calling it a rash challenge and a definite red. Later it seems that most agree it probably wasn't even a yellow.