Barcon
Well-Known Member
While I do think he's a weak ref, there is no rule about how many fouls bring a yellow card, no matter how much some pundits/commentators think.
Obviously, otherwise we'd be playing against ten men most weeks.
While I do think he's a weak ref, there is no rule about how many fouls bring a yellow card, no matter how much some pundits/commentators think.
Got to blame Riley, we have seen a glut of penalty decisions omitted, but I've also noticed a few in other games also, this turd Riley gave some dodgy decisions throughout his officiating nothing will ever compare to his invincible beating at Trafford then Pizzagate, if ever a game needed looking into it was that, a total utter cheat that Sunday and I'm no lover of Arsenal
The refs have 100% discretion. Do they whistle for a foul or not? Do they give a foul for one player having just given an almost identical foul to an opponent? Do they count up on fingers how many fouls (which they do for some!) or do they brandish the yellow for the first offence? There is more variation in an individual refereeing a game than you find at a United Nations assembly!
The Laws of the Game were once upon a time the most beautifully crafted set of rules for any sport. They have been buggered up by decades of tinkering, international board decisions in series upon series of attempts to rectify previous buggerations, refereeing interpretations that leave tens of thousands of fans wondering what they have just seen. Was Oliver the only person in Wembley who thought the foul on Aguero inside the penalty area was not sanctioned by the award of a penalty or had he wandered into some mental state where fouls were daffodils and throw ins were pancakes? I bet every Dipper fan breathed the sigh of sighs when he fixed his weasel face against awarding the obvious.
The first thing that should have happened whilst the guy was engraving MANCHESTER CITY onto the cup was a substantial explanation from Oliver why he didn't award the obvious!
Seen his Mrs ref at a Darlington FC match and she better at it than him tbf.
It's really not as simple as is made out, this being a ref lark. We're complaining he didn't give a penalty but, being honest, it took 4 or 5 replays before I was convinced. Obviously, I KNEW it was a penalty watching at Wembley, but then I'll go up for anything!
Still much prefer what Oliver didn't do to what Clattenberg did. Oliver missed something, or wasn't 100% certain, whilst Clattenberg guessed that something had happened.
The beauty of football is that "it's all about opinions". 10 of us could watch a game (probably not involving City) and we would disagree on a huge amount of things that happened in that game and how the referee interpreted/handled it.
You only have to look at other forums after a game to see that they think the ref has been as incompetent/biased or bent as we do. Surely that defies logic? The dippers think he cost them the game on Sunday. Looking at this thread there is no doubt the same would have been true on here, had we missed those penalties. We can't both be right.
I didn't need any. I was right in line, saw the whole thing in real time, the backwards attempt at a tackle, the leg go across Sergio and the clearest trip in the entire game. It was made even simpler because of the nature of the play at that moment. Nobody obstructing Oliver's view.
He didn't want to give anything controversial. I think, like I suspect a number of them do, that he had decided that he wasn't giving any penalties unless somebody rugby tackled, wrestled to the ground or fisted the ball from under the bar!
It is cheating. He is applying a sterner test for a penal offence inside the area than he is outside of it! Impure and simple! He didn't want ten scarlet-clad, incensed individuals in his face!
The interesting point in all this is whether the incident had happened at the other end would the outcome have been the same. As the ref on the day, he certainly, on past evidence, wouldn't have had ten sky blue-clad incensed individuals in his face!!
Thing is, these stern almost 100%, standards of proof he has for penalties do seem to lapse when certain clubs are involved. I remember a penalty the rags got in the Palace v Utd. game he officiated last season. Afterwards, Pardew said, "The ball came in, there was no real threat and Scott [Dann] leans in and is turning away. I think it hits the shoulder and his chest. From his angle the referee couldn't tell - it was impossible. I think it is a really tough call."
I agree, it was Clattenbergesqe. Here's a video of it;
There was also one earlier this season in the Utd. v Liverpool game. A penalty was definitely the correct decision on this occasion, based on the TV replays. However, given the angle that the ball deviates from Gomez's challenge I don't see how he could give it, taking into account his position and given the high standard of proof he usually requires before giving one. 35 secs in.
Sometimes, it seems a lot easier for him is all I'm saying.
It's really not as simple as is made out, this being a ref lark. We're complaining he didn't give a penalty but, being honest, it took 4 or 5 replays before I was convinced. Obviously, I KNEW it was a penalty watching at Wembley, but then I'll go up for anything!
Still much prefer what Oliver didn't do to what Clattenberg did. Oliver missed something, or wasn't 100% certain, whilst Clattenberg guessed that something had happened.
The beauty of football is that "it's all about opinions". 10 of us could watch a game (probably not involving City) and we would disagree on a huge amount of things that happened in that game and how the referee interpreted/handled it.
You only have to look at other forums after a game to see that they think the ref has been as incompetent/biased or bent as we do. Surely that defies logic? The dippers think he cost them the game on Sunday. Looking at this thread there is no doubt the same would have been true on here, had we missed those penalties. We can't both be right.