It was at Reading's Madjeski Stadium that we saw the quickest sending-off in the Premier League last year.
In fact, I believe it was the fastest sending-off ever clocked by a player coming on as a substitute. Keith Gillespie auditioned for honorary president of the Petr Cech Supporters' Club by elbowing Stephen Hunt fully 12 seconds after coming on as a replacement.
You'd think, then, that Reading's Dave Kitson might learn the old adage that those who ignore history are condemned to repeat it.
Kitson had been on for less than 40 seconds of Sunday's opening-day fixture for the Royals, away at Old Trafford against champions Manchester United, before he clattered into Patrice Evra.
Red hair, red mist, Red Devils, red card.
Kitson walked, and Reading bravely hung on to the 0-0 scoreline for a hard-earned first point of the campaign.
Simple, then yes? Reading are brave, Kitson's a moron. Case closed?
Not so fast. Compare the two scenarios, from this weekend and from January, when Gillespie committed his misdemeanour.
Now, Mr N Warnock may wish to focus on the lack of action Mark Halsey took against Steve Sidwell for a tackle a few moments previously, but for the purposes of this comparison, let us simply say that Gillespie walked on, confronted Hunt, elbowed him in the mush and got sent off. There was no other decision Halsey could have made.
Now back to Sunday, Kitson on Evra. Referee Rob Styles had a decision to make, and I refuse to berate him, despite him not being one of my favourite officials.
As a referee, sometimes you give a decision, whether it is a penalty award, giving a corner or a goal-kick, or in this case deciding what level of punishment to dish out to an offender, that afterwards you realise may have been inaccurate.
Was Styles right to send off Dave Kitson? The argument 'for' would be that in the Laws of the Game it is written in Law 12 that Serious Foul Play is a straight red card. If Rob Styles construed that tackle to be serious foul play, and you can see why, then Kitson walks, fair and square.
However, the realist in me knows a couple of things. Firstly, I know that if 100 tackles are made like that in the Premiership this season, I would say that no more than 20 will result in red cards.
I have no problem with the sending-off at all if that is what we will see from Rob Styles every week.
People with an anti-ref mindset from the outset frequently contradict themselves, with my favourite being how all refs should give the same decisions uniformly across the board - then go on to suggest that refs should use more common sense. So you want reactive, sensible, rational officials, that automatically give pre-set decisions? Human robots, in other, somewhat oxymoronic, words.
The phrase 'in the opinion of the referee' is used very frequently in the law book, and last time I checked, we all have varying opinions on a variety of issues. How otherwise would you explain the continued appearance of Titus Bramble in the Premiership? I might think he's rubbish, you might think he's rubbish, but it seems that Chris Hutchings disagrees. Titus Bramble is Premiership quality. In his opinion.
So in Rob Styles' opinion it was a sending-off. Other refs may agree, others may disagree, but it is the man in the middle that counts.
The only consistency card I would play within refereeing is that Styles must now be consistent. If a similar tackle is committed next week, Styles needs to send off the perpetrator.
Saying that all referees, on matters like this, matters of opinion, must think and do exactly the same is frankly not possible. It's like saying that because Sir Alex Ferguson lined his team up with a 4-4-2 formation that all other managers should follow suit.
I am not saying that all referees should be mavericks and wildly vary in their judgments - I simply think that when rational, opinion-based calls are required, it is utopian to say the least to think all of the Select Group officials would do exactly the same thing.
However, there is of course one aspect to the sending-off to take into consideration: the location.
I want to point out that I am not saying that Rob Styles only sent off Dave Kitson because it was at Old Trafford against Manchester United. I cannot say that. That's like saying, "Claudio Pizarro, he can score against Birmingham, but not against the better sides." Well he hasn't had a chance yet, so that wouldn't be right.
I'm happy to start the season with a clean slate for all officials, so I'll let Styles off, despite my suspicions. However, if he lets a similar tackle slide by because it is committed by a top-four player, or at a ground less intimidating than Old Trafford (i.e. all of them), then the word 'consistency' should be shouted at Styles from every rooftop.
In my opinion, anyway.