Massive lol @ Warnock. He's spent his managerial career sending out teams which try to win games by niggling and cheating. It's hard not to be drawn to the wise words of Hoddle: Maybe the karma is working from another lifetime.
Absolute rubbish.
He sent out teams that played to their strengths. To say he cheated is uninformed.
really don't see what the argument is to be honest. If City were informed that a foul had been committed then Warnock's lot would have been told this as well. There can be no excuse for teams taking the law into their own hands and allowing the opposition to score when informed of a decision like that. Somebody mentioned earlier that a goal kick had clearly been given and that City players were saying to the referee and linesman it was a goal kick. How does he know? Was he there? Can he lip-read through the side of someone's head? The free kick would probably have been taken like a goal kick anyway.
Quite frankly the way I see it is that City were apparently informed that a foul had been committed and, rightly so imo, played on at 0-0. Both sets of players would have known what the decision was as it is a referee's duty to inform players what has been decided - free kick or goal kick - because the rules for restarting play are different. The referee would have stated a reason for not giving a goal there and then because different infringements carry different restart rules. City were told "foul", therefore free kick. Palace would have known this as well.
In any event, EVERYBODY who watches or plays football will have heard the phrase "the referee's decision is final". We are all taught that this stands whether they are right or wrong. We, quite frankly, cannot end up have situations where "the referee's decision is final (when it suits us)" as imo this would bring the game into farce. It would set a dangerous precedent if, in situations like this, players started taking the laws into their own hands.
But what about if the palace players and staff were informed it was ruled out because it wasn't a goal,because it didn't go in? It works both ways.
Anyway, there's clearly a difference between a dodgy decision (i.e hand ball / penalty decisions) and a cut and dried one like that where the outcome was irrifutable to 99.9% of people in the ground.