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[Albion] Was it a red?

You're the ref - what do you give?

  • Nothing

  • A foul

  • A yellow card

  • A red card


Results are only viewable after voting.


kevo

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2008
9,809
The problem is, I might be persuaded it is a red under the current guidelines, but if so then there are multiple others that are also red and are not given - comes back to ref consistency again and again
Macguire yesterday being the obvious example.
 




Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,283
Cumbria
Comfortable with it being a red - but now I've watched back a number if times, I can't help but note that their guy was a bit 'confused' as to which leg this 'dangerous' tackle had caught him. Which would imply that there wasn't actually much force behind it.
 






W3D

I'm Thirsty
Apr 21, 2021
156
Worthing
He gets away with it, “I don’t know where they got 9 mins from” I f***ing do, why dont interviewers pull him up on it, its basically gaslighting. I don’t know why there were only 2 mins in the first half? Our trainers must have been on for 3 minutes with Welbeck. The officials were a joke yesterday, Tarkoski could have had 3 yellows, getting used to it now.
Yup, agree with everything you've said
 




Littlemo

Well-known member
Aug 25, 2022
1,697
Yesterday I was in agreement with it being a red but after seeing Maguire and now Caicedo’s challenges, I’m not that sure anymore. Gilmour was the least dangerous of all of them.

I wonder if either of these are worth anything as evidence to appeal?
 
Last edited:


Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,283
Cumbria
Yesterday I was in agreement with it being a red but after seeing Maguire and now Caicedo’s challenges, I’m not that sure anymore. Gilmour was the least dangerous of all of them.

I wonder if either of these are worth anything as evidence to appeal?
Probably not - they'll just say 'it's subjective'.
 


Sheebo

Well-known member
Jul 13, 2003
29,319
Dunky has it right. Can see both ways. I don’t think anyone saying 100% one way or the other is being fair. It’s debatable and a soft red or yellow - not a clear and obvious red.
 














Milano

Well-known member
Aug 15, 2012
3,940
Sussex but not by the sea
At the time I thought red, just. Now after watching the other 2 very similar ‘tackles’ this weekend I haven’t a clue, what I do know is that the level of consistency in our ‘top’ refs is non-existent.
 






JBizzle

Well-known member
Apr 18, 2010
6,235
Seaford
Just because other tackles weren't given red cards doesn't make this less of a red card. Sure, there's no intent or malice (but that's irrelevant), yes he got some of the ball first (also irrelevant), but his studs ended up planted half way up the opposition players calf. It's a red card all day long.
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,734
The Fatherland
Just because other tackles weren't given red cards doesn't make this less of a red card. Sure, there's no intent or malice (but that's irrelevant), yes he got some of the ball first (also irrelevant), but his studs ended up planted half way up the opposition players calf. It's a red card all day long.
This explains the red perfectly, and my thoughts.
 


Nobby Cybergoat

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2021
8,632
In football, the idea is that you have to kick the ball yeh?

And if you kick a ball, at some stage the mechanical action of your leg motion means that at some stage your foot will be over the height of another players foot yeh?

And in football, the idea is that another player might be challenging to kick the same ball, which means that if they get there just about second, there's a chance they might get kicked with the follow through yeh?

When did we become so sensitive to this?

I don't know what the guidance given to refs is. But as a viewer, I think the law should be ....

Normal attempt to play ball. Ball won. Player caught in follow through. No foul.
Normal attempt to play ball. Ball not won. Player caught in follow through. Foul. Yellow card.
Attempt to play ball. Player caught in follow through. Contact unnaturally high. Foul. Yellow card
Attempt to play ball. Excessive force used when playing the ball, with likely intention to intimidate or injure opponent. Foul. Red card.
 


Baldseagull

Well-known member
Jan 26, 2012
11,839
Crawley
Here you go. Basically identical.


The difference is the force. Gilmour pulls his foot away, but unfortunately not before making contact, I still think its a red card for Gilmour, but the one you show is a worse challenge, with far more force, and no attempt to pull out, not identical.
 




Uh_huh_him

Well-known member
Sep 28, 2011
12,138
In football, the idea is that you have to kick the ball yeh?

And if you kick a ball, at some stage the mechanical action of your leg motion means that at some stage your foot will be over the height of another players foot yeh?

And in football, the idea is that another player might be challenging to kick the same ball, which means that if they get there just about second, there's a chance they might get kicked with the follow through yeh?

When did we become so sensitive to this?

I don't know what the guidance given to refs is. But as a viewer, I think the law should be ....

Normal attempt to play ball. Ball won. Player caught in follow through. No foul.
Normal attempt to play ball. Ball not won. Player caught in follow through. Foul. Yellow card.
Attempt to play ball. Player caught in follow through. Contact unnaturally high. Foul. Yellow card
Attempt to play ball. Excessive force used when playing the ball, with likely intention to intimidate or injure opponent. Foul. Red card.
Agree, but that isn't the guidance.
 


hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
62,769
Chandlers Ford
The difference is the force. Gilmour pulls his foot away, but unfortunately not before making contact, I still think its a red card for Gilmour, but the one you show is a worse challenge, with far more force, and no attempt to pull out, not identical.
Splitting hairs.

You're (obviously) never finding two separate incidents that are literally identical - but every single thing that myopic Albion fans have claimed of Billy's tackle, is true of that one. No clear intent / average force / both get a little of the ball / both catch the opponent's standing foot above the ankle. (And of course, the myopic Liverpool fans also claimed it was unfair).

Both very clear red cards.
 


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