Fulham 1-0 Liverpool (05.12.2011)

Kevin Friend is a Premier League new boy but has so far enjoyed a reasonably uncontroversial start to this time in the top division.

He was, however, tested during this well-fought encounter and had several critical decisions to make in a match that was otherwise fair and competitive.

Adam - Penalty or No Penalty?
Fulham were attacking when they lost the ball and a quick Liverpool break seemed sure to end in a goal. Philippe Senderos was chasing Charlie Adam (who ought to have passed to his left to a free Liverpool player), and eventually fouled him, clipping his legs from behind. The end result was a free-kick and yellow card.

The yellow card was undoubtedly correct as Adam was not presented with a clear opportunity to score. Other Fulham defenders had retreated and there was no clear shot on. The major talking point was if the foul was in or outside the box: Friend used the assistant referee to eventually give a free-kick, and on replays it looks the correct decision.

Adam fell well inside the area and there were two periods of contact - on his back and then legs. But even the latter occurred outside the box and a very tight decision was called correctly - a big plus for the referee team, given their status as freshers.

Jay Spearing - Red Card or No Red Card?
Spearing's dismissal came out of the blue: a relatively clean game was suddenly turned on its head. Even the television cameras had moved away from the incident when Spearing came through and seemed to win the ball from Moussa Dembele.

Suddenly the camera pulled back and Dembele was in a mighty heap and Friend had pulled his red card out. Replays showed Spearing had followed through and caught Dembele high up on the calf.

Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish summed it up well, "Sometimes it's a red, sometimes it's not." By the letter of the law, a red card was the correct decision. The tackle was hard and uncontrolled - the distinction had to be made between reckless and excessive force. Friend took his time and decided that the tackle offered enough danger to the player. Another day it might have been yellow, but referees are correct in dismissing players guilty of such offences as such wild tackles can lead to serious injury.

 


Comments

Layth Jato
12/06/2011 15:45

Adam - Penalty or No Penalty?
When watching the replay, you can see that the player was just inside the penalty area, but the referee had to rely on the linesman simply because he was too far from the play to make such a decision and because as the replay showed he actually looked at the ground to see where the mark was made. Are you kidding me ?
That mark was made by the trailing foot of the defender and the linesman had his vision blocked by the defender.
Let's think about this: This happened past the half circle of the penalty box. Sure the referee had a game beyond his capabilities, but we have seen this many times this year in the Premier League with many referees. Here we see one of the technology disadvantages of the game as the referee or his assistant can influence one another by simply using their communicator on the field rather than talking about it which gives them time to think about the incident further. Trying to justify the call with how the Liverpool choice he had, and not being a goal scoring opportunity does not change the fact that the call was wrong.
It was definitely not the correct decision, but I have to give them a plus for team work on both making the wrong call and communicating it well amongst each other.

Jay Spearing - Red Card or No Red Card?
Now this one was a joke of a call. We all know that Dalglish is playing politics with his comments, plus his comments cannot justify the referee wrong decision. This was a clean tackle but unfortunate for Liverpool's player that he fell down and got tripped the Fulham player. The Fulham player did a fantastic job selling his act to the fresh referee who is trying to make a name for himself. A prove of this is how the Fulham player came up after and played without any hint of injury. You can watch the video again and again and you will see that it is no more than a yellow card at best.

Finally, Dalglish did not say “sometimes it's a red, sometimes it's not." ONLY!!! He said that but added, "as long as they are consistent" and the referee was not consistent at all ...

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