British Bulldog
The great escape
- Feb 6, 2006
- 10,974
Yellow all day long, it was only Ronaldo getting in the refs face that influenced Var.
I think that's where I am. Dunk stopped a clear 1-on-1 goalscoring opportunity, as I don't believe Webster would have been able to get a challenge in.
However it was marginal enough that for me, with a yellow given on the field, VAR prompting that to be bumped up to a red feels a bit rough.
However, it all comes down to Dunk being caught in possession which was neither the ref's nor the VAR ref's fault. We played a very risky game in the first half, and then into the second in terms of allowing United's frontline to be on top of us before we released the ball. Both Sanchez and our defenders did this repeatedly to the point I can only assume it was an intentional tactic. Most of the time we got by that press and advanced, very quickly, into the United half and found ourselves in a good attacking position.
If you live by the sword, you die by the sword...
Yellow all day long, it was only Ronaldo getting in the refs face that influenced Var.
I have changed my mind on this.
At first I thought there was no way you could be sure whether Webster or Elanga would get to the ball first, but having watched it a few times it takes Webster around 1.6-1.8 seconds to get to the ball from almost a standing start. I don't think he could have got there much faster. Elanga only had to run another 10 yards to get to the ball and was going a fair pace when Dunk stopped him. I think he'd have got to the ball well before Webster and have gotten a clear shot away.
I think that the ManU player Elanga kicks the ball from Dunk rather hard and its travelling at a rate of knots so its seems that Webbo could have got there to tackle/clear the ball which makes this incident 50/50. So its not in my mind a clear and obvious error. And as another poster says Dunk wasn't technically the last man. All ifs and buts though.I have changed my mind on this.
At first I thought there was no way you could be sure whether Webster or Elanga would get to the ball first, but having watched it a few times it takes Webster around 1.6-1.8 seconds to get to the ball from almost a standing start. I don't think he could have got there much faster. Elanga only had to run another 10 yards to get to the ball and was going a fair pace when Dunk stopped him. I think he'd have got to the ball well before Webster and have gotten a clear shot away.
I have changed my mind on this.
At first I thought there was no way you could be sure whether Webster or Elanga would get to the ball first, but having watched it a few times it takes Webster around 1.6-1.8 seconds to get to the ball from almost a standing start. I don't think he could have got there much faster. Elanga only had to run another 10 yards to get to the ball and was going a fair pace when Dunk stopped him. I think he'd have got to the ball well before Webster and have gotten a clear shot away.
Looking at the replay, it's not a 100% foul by Dunk anyway. Elanga feels the arm on him and falls over.
Webster is definitely close enough for there to be huge doubt that he was free on goal.
Whilst you may be correct on this if Elanga had made a clean tackle and continued at pace, his body position might suggest otherwise.
The first picture is from when he nicks the ball from Dunk and the second is from where Dunk makes contact with his leg and changed the arm position from a block to a grab and pull. (Note, he has not started to pull back yet, that comes a split second later)
View attachment 145209
View attachment 145210
His momentum has completely shifted with his front foot planted flat and is already leaning back. This would in turn effect how quickly he would've got to the ball.
Deleted.
• denying a goal or an obvious goal-scoring opportunity to an opponent whose
overall movement is towards the offender’s goal by an offence punishable by
a free kick
This law is far too subjective. What does it mean by an 'obvious goal-scoring chance'? Webster was behind the ball and could conceivably have run into Elanga's path before he reached the penalty area if Dunk had not touched Elanga. Had it been Lamptey we all know that he could have got there and had a cup of tea before Elanga arrived.
Surely a goal-scoring chance is not just being in a position to shoot; that could occur anywhere on the pitch. It must mean that the attacker is the closest player to the goal line and has possession of the ball when fouled from behind.
In a similar way to the way the offside line clarifies that law. Even though an attacking player can be ruled onside by a defender on the far side of the pitch who doesn't have a snowball in hell's chance of reaching the attacker.
Definitely not a red. The match and our chance of a result were ruined and we lose Dunk for important games. All due to poor refereeing. Almost as bad as the Lee Mason fiasco last season.
Webster is definitely close enough for there to be huge doubt that he was free on goal.
A real 50:50 call on whether Webster would’ve got there first.
So no, with blue tinted specs.
(But I wish Dunk had just cleared it upfield a second earlier. Such a dangerous place when being pressed. Half asleep).