âOne of the worst decisions Iâve seenâ â should Lewis-Skelly have seen red?
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The decision left Mikel Arteta âfumingâ, pundits were baffled, while Arsenal fans were furious.
The Gunners may have beaten struggling Wolves 1-0 to maintain their Premier League title hopes â but it was Myles Lewis-Skellyâs controversial red card that stole the headlines.
In the 43rd minute Lewis-Skelly caught Wolvesâ Matt Doherty above the ankle to break up a counter-attack on the edge of Wolvesâ box â about 70 yards away from Arsenalâs goal.
Referee Michael Oliver showed the 18-year-old a straight red card, a decision which was upheld by the video assistant referee (VAR).
After the match, Arsenal manager Arteta told BBC Match of the Day the decision was âso obvious that today you donât need my wordsâ.
âI am absolutely fuming but I leave it with you,â he said to Sky Sports.
âBecause it is that obvious, I donât think my words are going to help.â
Arsenal rallied against Wolves, who themselves went down to 10 after Joao Gomesâ second yellow, and the Gunners celebrated a 74th-minute Riccardo Calafiori winner to stay within six points of leaders Liverpool.
âOne of the worst decisionsâ and âclearly not a redâ
At an Arsenal corner, Wolves cleared their lines and looking to start a counter-attack, Doherty took the ball from the edge of the penalty area and drove forward.
Lewis-Skelly caught Dohertyâs shin and then foot, bringing the defender down, a challenge which the Premier League Match Centre described on X as âserious foul playâ.
Oliver quickly showed a red card, and VAR checked the call, deciding against sending the referee to the pitchside monitor.
On the Premier Leagueâs website it says high, full and forceful contact on the ankle or above is âconsidered dangerousâ and a âred cardâ.
The divisionâs record goalscorer, Alan Shearer, said the sending off was âone of the worst decisions Iâve seen in a long timeâ.
âAs a referee you can get it wrong on the pitch, you might see something which is incorrect,â he told BBC Radio 5 Live.
âHow on earth Darren England, the VAR, thinks that the referee has got that right and there is no need to send him to the screen.â
Asked if Arsenal will appeal against the decision, Arteta told Sky Sports: âThatâs for the club to decide what the best decision is. I think itâs that obvious, maybe we donât even need to.â
Unless overturned, the Arsenal academy graduate will face a three-match ban, missing his sideâs matches with Manchester City and Leicester City in the Premier League, and Newcastle United in the Carabao Cup semi-final.
Arsenal substitute Calafiori told Sky Sports that Lewis-Skelly was âdisappointed for the teamâ and that âfrom the bench, it was clearly not a red cardâ.
At 18 years and 121 days, Lewis-Skelly became the third youngest player to be sent off in the Premier League, behind Wayne Rooney and Michael Owen.
How did the pundits react?
Former Premier League referee Mike Dean on Sky Sports: âWhen you see a still image you understand what he has done. He has put his studs down his leg for serious foul play. Scraped down the Achilles.â
Former Chelsea and Scotland winger Pat Nevin: âMyles Lewis-Skelly is only 10 yards outside the oppositionâs box. It must be for violent conduct, but that doesnât look like violent conduct. Itâs a cynical trip. I have never seen that in my life. I am stunned by a red card.â
Former Manchester City centre-back Nedum Onuoha: âItâs not definitely a red card for me. I can see now with more replays why it is the right thing to do. Maybe the referee sees that Myles Lewis-Skelly has no intent to play the ball. Itâs a tough moment for Arsenal. For the youngster, I think he needs to understand there are different ways to do that.â
âThatâs not a red, that will get overturned very quickly. He tries to stop the counter-attack and it doesnât look very bad to me.â
BBC Radio 5 Live presenter Mark Chapman: âBaffling and nonsensicalâ
Former Blackburn and Tottenham midfielder Tim Sherwood on Sky Sports: âI am still reeling from that. I canât believe he has sent him off.â
How did the fans react?
Jim: âItâs not controversial sending Myles Lewis-Skelly off, he didnât even try to play the ball.â
Paul: âGood decision. Absolutely fed up with players getting away with deliberately hacking players down with no attempt to get the ball.â
Tim: âFans and managers need to come together and strike in terms of voicing all our frustrations on the quality of referees. Iâm not an Arsenal fan but thatâs NEVER a red card. If thatâs a foul every tackle is a red!â
Tocowa: âSeen worse tackles not even yellow-carded.â
Simon, Colchester: âThe narrative that it was above the ankle so itâs a red is utter, utter nonsense. There are multiple fouls EVERY game above the ankle that arenât even given as yellows, let alone a red.â
Arsenalâs latest red card grievance
For Arsenal, Lewis-Skellyâs dismissal was their fourth in the Premier League this season, one more than any other side.
It is not the first time the Gunners have been left aggrieved following a red card.
When Leandro Trossard was given a second yellow for time-wasting against Manchester City in September, Arteta again said the decision was âso obviousâ he would leave it up to the media to decide.
This season Arteta has also criticised decisions to send off Declan Rice at home to Brighton and a penalty call against William Saliba away to the Seagulls.
In 2022, referee Oliver gave Arsenalâs Gabriel Martinelli two yellow cards, one after the other, something which Arteta said he had never seen before.
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Published26 July 2022
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