ladbroke8745
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Gabriel lucky to not be sent off?
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It's smacks of let keep it 11 against 11 because its the biggest game of the season it also smacks of the VAR being afraid to overrule Taylor because I assumed he saw it properly and decided yellow was enough.
On the other hand, whilst Haaland was very honest here, if he went down clutching his face I would be saying that amount of contact shouldn't make you fall to the ground like that but there was a clear forward movement by Gabriel there, it was definitely more than just heads touching.
As a side issue about bias among match officials, I was aware yesterday that a young relative is bored, having suffered a broken leg, so is stuck indoors.Yet more pro-City PGMOL bias by letting that useless donkey stay on the pitch.
It isn’t & shouldn’t be as straightforward as that since if it was there will be many more red cards than there are at the moment. It appears to be only the PL who want red cards for hair pulls no matter what level of intensity and so players know exactly where they stand. As to the incident with Harlaand & Gabriel, had Gabriel been sent off Taylor would not have been incorrect in Law, but was it a head-butt as we know it. I get what Big Cat is saying about the wider game and had it been at grass roots I would have expect it to be dealt with by a red card simply because of it wasn’t the Referee is very likely to have issues with Match Control (if there wasn’t anyway because of the incident). However, for me, this was an orange because it was a locking of horns with Gabriel’s head not being brought back before moving forward, though he did move it forward with more of a push. Was there some wriggle room for Taylor - I agree with Graham Scott and think that there was. I know many think there wasn’t including many on this forum.Interesting here some are saying it should be a red card, but with the United Hair pull it shouldn't have been one? There was probably less force in Gabriel's head movement than the hair pull.
I guess it shows everyone has varying opinions and why VAR is always under scrutiny!
Disclaimer: I think any punch/kick/stamp/headbutt/hair pull should be a red card regardless of force or any definition involved in the rule book. It simply isn't part of the game and should have lengthy bans attached to it. Also, dives to make out you've been headbutted should be punished accordingly.
It isn’t & shouldn’t be as straightforward as that since if it was there will be many more red cards than there are at the moment. It appears to be only the PL who want red cards for hair pulls no matter what level of intensity and so players know exactly where they stand. As to the incident with Harlaand & Gabriel, had Gabriel been sent off Taylor would not have been incorrect in Law, but was it a head-butt as we know it. I get what Big Cat is saying about the wider game and had it been at grass roots I would have expect it to be dealt with by a red card simply because of it wasn’t the Referee is very likely to have issues with Match Control (if there wasn’t anyway because of the incident). However, for me, this was an orange because it was a locking of horns with Gabriel’s head not being brought back before moving forward, though he did move it forward with more of a push. Was there some wriggle room for Taylor - I agree with Graham Scott and think that there was. I know many think there wasn’t including many on this forum.
It’s also not a headbutt that is often seen in football, especially Sunday morning football. What football expects is a horrid term, what does it actually mean, if there is a subjective decision for the award of a penalty - does football expect it, or not expect it! Is the incident involving Gabriel violent conduct in the pure sense of the word, or is as Taylor is presumably seeing it as both adopting an aggressive attitude! I am not saying he was right, but I am also saying he is not wrong either. Football as with other sports and most things in life is not always black & white - there are shades of grey, some darker than others!It's not a headbutt that you will see in a street brawl of course not but it's a clear unjustified forward movement onto the head of Haaland and as Big Cat post shows, we have seen red cards for much less in the past. Football expects a red card and the law certainly suggests it should be a red but yet again we are looking for excuses for the referee making such a bad decision really.
I can’t see that it was excessive force or brutality. Although I usually always like to compare apples with apples and oranges with oranges, as to hair pulls (not this incident of course), which are not usually excessive force, but are seen by the PL/FA etc as an act of brutality (at the moment anyway) & I can live with that.The PL's comments haven't really helped! Licence to do your head-butts less aggressively.
"The referee's call of no red card was checked and confirmed by VAR - with the action from Gabriel deemed not to be excessively aggressive or violent."
That's a bit rum when VC means using excessive force or brutality "regardless of whether contact is made".