Lot ifs and buts there, to claim that was a clear goal scoring opportunity is really a bit of a stretch.
I will need to watch again but that was my feeling last night. It’s subjective, I agree.
Lot ifs and buts there, to claim that was a clear goal scoring opportunity is really a bit of a stretch.
very subjective and loads of variables.
Assuming you'd shoot somewhere round the 18 yard line with an oncoming keeper, I think you'd get there for a clear shot before Webster interfered.
any further and AW would have slid through, with the ball and walked off whilst the Manure cockjuggler was laying there crying Ronaldo style, pressing his var emergency button in his sock.
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The point is that Elanga would have been far closer to the ball had he not been pulled back. Webster would have got nowhere near him before he had a clear shot.
Stupid challenge.
https://www.skysports.com/watch/video/sports/football/12543084/should-dunk-have-seen-red
Tough one, probably (probably being the important word) was the correct decision in the end. Was it a clear and obvious error by the ref....no ****ing way!
Tough one, probably (probably being the important word) was the correct decision in the end. Was it a clear and obvious error by the ref....no ****ing way!
Don't know which way to vote, so haven't.
Obviously had it been the other way round it probably wouldn't have even been a foul.
The point is that Elanga would have been far closer to the ball had he not been pulled back. Webster would have got nowhere near him before he had a clear shot.
Stupid challenge.
https://www.skysports.com/watch/video/sports/football/12543084/should-dunk-have-seen-red
I wonder if anyone has ever done any research into how many penalties/red cards etc are issued at grounds of the so-called top 6 compared to other grounds. And perhaps correlate it with individual refs?! I am sure that such a thing would meet with much understandable opposition by the football authorities and the ref's union, but it would be fascinating nonetheless and might put to bed the criticism that the top 6 are given favourable treatment -or otherwise! ITo be fair those teams at home would more than likely be on top and thuse penalties given against them might reasonably be statistically less? However,I recall Maguire's "foul" on Welbeck last year which went unpunished and we were not given a penalty. The bigger the ground the louder the abuse, and pressure on the ref is thus so much greater to placate the locals.In the interest of fairness, my neighbour is a spurs fan and he says that the refs of late have been shocking with regard to Spurs' pleas for fouls etc. Balance that ,however,with what I read last year that bias may be subconscious -a PL player of a team recently promoted playing one of the top 6 said that the ref called the PL regulars by their christian names, as has was so used to them, but the new team was addressed as number 8 etc.
I really don't know but it would be good to have some accurate info/data on the ever present comment that the bigger clubs get preferential treatment and whether this view is justified or not. Officialdom will of course deny it, understandably, but refs are at the end of the day only human.
Rant over!
I wonder if anyone has ever done any research into how many penalties/red cards etc are issued at grounds of the so-called top 6 compared to other grounds. And perhaps correlate it with individual refs?! I am sure that such a thing would meet with much understandable opposition by the football authorities and the ref's union, but it would be fascinating nonetheless and might put to bed the criticism that the top 6 are given favourable treatment -or otherwise! ITo be fair those teams at home would more than likely be on top and thuse penalties given against them might reasonably be statistically less? However,I recall Maguire's "foul" on Welbeck last year which went unpunished and we were not given a penalty. The bigger the ground the louder the abuse, and pressure on the ref is thus so much greater to placate the locals.In the interest of fairness, my neighbour is a spurs fan and he says that the refs of late have been shocking with regard to Spurs' pleas for fouls etc. Balance that ,however,with what I read last year that bias may be subconscious -a PL player of a team recently promoted playing one of the top 6 said that the ref called the PL regulars by their christian names, as has was so used to them, but the new team was addressed as number 8 etc.
I really don't know but it would be good to have some accurate info/data on the ever present comment that the bigger clubs get preferential treatment and whether this view is justified or not. Officialdom will of course deny it, understandably, but refs are at the end of the day only human.
Rant over!
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...
Playing debbie's avocado here, but I wonder whether the 'goal scoring opportunity' doesn't necessarily mean the player on the ball had to be the one through on goal.
It would be interesting to see.
In a strange way though, I'm almost not sure I want it to be completely fair. A large, vociferous crowd SHOULD be able to give you an advantage. If the Amex is full and angry and contesting every decision the ref makes in a big game, I want the crowd to be able to influence the ref enough to get one marginal decision that can change the course of game in our favour. It's part of football, and I'm not completely sure I want it to go away.
The players surrounding the ref thing, however, is bullshit, and should be stamped out immediately. It's absolutely easy to sort that problem if the authorities wanted to. Literally couldn't be any simpler.
I said on the match thread that it was hardly a foul and for VAR not to even look at the foul was ridiculous. It was a typical Man Utd pressure the Ref into making a decision and it worked. Disgraceful cheats the lot of them, but then as we know from past experience the rules of the game do not apply to Man United.