by retro royal » 17 Sep 2015 09:19
by Armadillo Roadkill » 17 Sep 2015 09:21
by PeterReadingborn59 » 17 Sep 2015 10:06
RoyalBlue It was effectively the lino/assistant ref who sent off Sa. The ref wasn't even looking in the direction of the incident when it happened. I can only assume that his assistant spoke to him over the radio link and said something like 'Head butt by Reading 10". The ref then decided that was good enough to rush over and brandish the red without conferring further with his assistant.
A p*ss poor way of managing the players and the crowd. It would have been far better for everyone had he made a point of going over and conferring with his assistant before dealing with both players at the same time.
Instead the pratt rushed to deal with Sa before eventually wandering back to confer with his assistant, prior to issuing the soft yellow to the Derby cheat.
by Nameless » 17 Sep 2015 10:09
PeterReadingborn59RoyalBlue It was effectively the lino/assistant ref who sent off Sa. The ref wasn't even looking in the direction of the incident when it happened. I can only assume that his assistant spoke to him over the radio link and said something like 'Head butt by Reading 10". The ref then decided that was good enough to rush over and brandish the red without conferring further with his assistant.
A p*ss poor way of managing the players and the crowd. It would have been far better for everyone had he made a point of going over and conferring with his assistant before dealing with both players at the same time.
Instead the pratt rushed to deal with Sa before eventually wandering back to confer with his assistant, prior to issuing the soft yellow to the Derby cheat.
+1 totally agree, referee showed to be a typical by the book type that exist these days, with no use of experience he should have built-up through the years, to know that such an incident normally takes two who should be treated in a similar fashion, to treat players differently would require additional information from the assistant referee and I doubt if that occurred over the mics - the referee had allowed the Derby player to kick and hold Sa through out the first half without taking any action and an experienced referee would have had a word with both before the incident.
by paultheroyal » 17 Sep 2015 10:34
NamelessPeterReadingborn59RoyalBlue It was effectively the lino/assistant ref who sent off Sa. The ref wasn't even looking in the direction of the incident when it happened. I can only assume that his assistant spoke to him over the radio link and said something like 'Head butt by Reading 10". The ref then decided that was good enough to rush over and brandish the red without conferring further with his assistant.
A p*ss poor way of managing the players and the crowd. It would have been far better for everyone had he made a point of going over and conferring with his assistant before dealing with both players at the same time.
Instead the pratt rushed to deal with Sa before eventually wandering back to confer with his assistant, prior to issuing the soft yellow to the Derby cheat.
+1 totally agree, referee showed to be a typical by the book type that exist these days, with no use of experience he should have built-up through the years, to know that such an incident normally takes two who should be treated in a similar fashion, to treat players differently would require additional information from the assistant referee and I doubt if that occurred over the mics - the referee had allowed the Derby player to kick and hold Sa through out the first half without taking any action and an experienced referee would have had a word with both before the incident.
You obviously have no idea about refereeing, or indeed basic principles of justice !
by PeterReadingborn59 » 17 Sep 2015 10:41
NamelessPeterReadingborn59RoyalBlue It was effectively the lino/assistant ref who sent off Sa. The ref wasn't even looking in the direction of the incident when it happened. I can only assume that his assistant spoke to him over the radio link and said something like 'Head butt by Reading 10". The ref then decided that was good enough to rush over and brandish the red without conferring further with his assistant.
A p*ss poor way of managing the players and the crowd. It would have been far better for everyone had he made a point of going over and conferring with his assistant before dealing with both players at the same time.
Instead the pratt rushed to deal with Sa before eventually wandering back to confer with his assistant, prior to issuing the soft yellow to the Derby cheat.
+1 totally agree, referee showed to be a typical by the book type that exist these days, with no use of experience he should have built-up through the years, to know that such an incident normally takes two who should be treated in a similar fashion, to treat players differently would require additional information from the assistant referee and I doubt if that occurred over the mics - the referee had allowed the Derby player to kick and hold Sa through out the first half without taking any action and an experienced referee would have had a word with both before the incident.
You obviously have no idea about refereeing, or indeed basic principles of justice !
by LUX » 17 Sep 2015 10:46
paultheroyal Dreary me.
by Nameless » 17 Sep 2015 11:15
by Sutekh » 17 Sep 2015 11:22
by Nameless » 17 Sep 2015 11:31
by PeterReadingborn59 » 17 Sep 2015 11:34
Nameless Well Peter if you are an experienced ref your comments are even more bizarre.
Are you really suggesting that you would see or be advised of a player striking another and automatically send both off because you assume both had committed a violent conduct offence ? Surely you punish what you and your co official actually see, not what you think might have happened ?
It's hardly common sense to assume that an offence has been committed despite no one seeing it !
With the officials miked up it's easy to communicate without standing face to face. If the Lino said 'violent conduct, Reading 10 (can't recall Sa's number !!), need to talk about other action' then they've done their job.
I do agree with RB though that he could have held off on Sa's card, called both players over and shown appropriate ones. It did look a bit messy.
by Nameless » 17 Sep 2015 11:39
by PeterReadingborn59 » 17 Sep 2015 11:47
Nameless But you stick with the idea that based on experience rather than observation you would send off two players if just one of them had been seen to be guilty of violent conduct ?
Clearly the officials worked out that there was a 'reason' why Sa acted the way he did, hence the yellow card shown to Shakell.
by Nameless » 17 Sep 2015 11:51
by PeterReadingborn59 » 17 Sep 2015 12:03
MoorgateRoyalSnowball136 On the SA Incident...
I was in line and got a good view.
Not sure what started the whole thing but Shackle (sp?) gave a load of verbal
and was very intimidating, moving towards SA. He then "chest-butted" SA who
stood his ground.
Shackle then pushed his forehead at SA. Not a head-butt exactly. They were chest to
chest and he just "leaned'. They both pulled back ever so slightly (at this point it
would be a yellow each, maybe a red for Shackle) but then Shackle feinted a head-but
and SA fainted back, slightly more obviously. IMO there was no head contact from the
so-called head-set.
Sa was beautifully conned by a defender trying to get him sent off and frankly he
should be fined.
The linesman, who was useless all night, bottled it, IMO.
In all honesty, neither really deserved a red, but the Derby man
was just as guilty, so two reds or two yellows.
I saw it as they were squaring up face-to-face, but Sa was the first to move his head in a very deliberate, obvious manner towards Shackell.
It was right in front of me, although I'd love to see a full replay of the incident to be sure of what happened.
Either way, I think Shackell did well (from Derby's point of view) to provoke Sa into reacting. That must have been mentioned before the game, as some of the rough challenges on Sa also suggested. But also, as I said before, he could have gone down after the 'head butt' and caused a mass brawl, so I will credit him for at least staying on his feet. If the ref sees a player do what Sa did, he will likely send him off regardless of the opponents' reaction.
Sa will need to learn how to deal with shit defenders who will provoke him instead of trying to defend properly against him, which Shackell didn't do all night, and hopefully he will learn from the mistake and control himself better next time.
by paultheroyal » 17 Sep 2015 12:09
by Nameless » 17 Sep 2015 12:12
by paultheroyal » 17 Sep 2015 12:13
by Armadillo Roadkill » 17 Sep 2015 12:25
by Nameless » 17 Sep 2015 12:29
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