The
English Football Association has launched an investigation after
Chelsea accused referee Mark Clattenburg of using “inappropriate
language” towards two of their players in Sunday’s defeat by Manchester
United.
“The
FA has begun an investigation relating to allegations made following
Sunday’s fixture at Stamford Bridge between Chelsea and Manchester
United,” it said on its website on Monday.
Leaders
Chelsea made an official complaint against Clattenburg, who sent off
two home players — Branislav Ivanovic and Fernando Torres — in the
highly-charged 3-2 Stamford Bridge defeat.
The
club did not name the players he is alleged to have used inappropriate
language towards or of what nature the remarks were, but a spokesman
refused to deny that Nigerian Mikel Obi had visited the referee’s room
and demanded for an apology after the game. It was learnt that his
refusal to apologise to Mikel and Chelsea that made the club to launch
official complaint to the FA.
Mikel was booked for dissent during the second half.
It is also believed that the second player is Juan Mata whom the referee allegedly called Spanish t***t.
The
club spokesman told reporters, “We have lodged a complaint to the
Premier League match delegate with regards to inappropriate language
used by the referee and directed at two of our players in two separate
incidents.
“The match delegate will pass the complaint to the Football Association. We will make no further comment at this time.”
A highly rated Nigerian referee Gabriel Adigwe who reviewed the incident on SuperSport said
specifically on the Fernando Torres incident that Clattenburg error
could have happened to many other referees given the way it happened.
“He
had a choice to issue a card for simulating or award a free kick. He
took the first option based on he perceived from his position even
though it turned out to be wrong because replays have proven that there
was actually contact,” he said...
The
affair is likely to plunge English soccer, which is only just
recovering from one damaging scandal surrounding Chelsea after captain
John Terry’s ban for racism, straight back into a new crisis involving
the European champions.
It
was also announced on Monday that FIFA referee Clattenburg would not be
officiating at any Premier League matches this weekend.
“Mark
Clattenburg is one of the elite referees in world football and, in
these circumstances, the intense level of scrutiny would detract from
the match and be unfair to the clubs and the supporters of both sides,”
said a statement from the Professional Game Match Officials Board, which
manages top English referees.
A number of Monday’s British newspapers simply had the headline “Accused” on their back pages.
The Guardian had a banner headline “Ref in Chelsea race row” while the Daily Mail proclaimed “Ref Race Row” although those allegations have not been substantiated.
Chelsea
are currently without skipper Terry, who has served two games of a
four-match domestic ban for racially abusing Queens Park Rangers
defender Anton Ferdinand last year.
That
case has blighted English soccer for a year after the former England
player was also ordered to appear in court accused of a racially
aggravated public order offence, of which he was acquitted.
The
FA, however, using different standards of proof to guide its charge,
found him guilty and fined him 220,000 pounds ($354,200) as well as
banning him. Terry decided not to appeal.
The
Durham-born referee was put in charge of the League Cup final in
February and the Olympic final between Brazil and Mexico in August.
Clattenburg is one of the FIFA candidates to referee at the 2014 World
Cup in Brazil.
Former
Premier League official Graham Poll has suggested Chelsea’s complaint
could hinge on evidence from Clattenburg’s assistants and the fourth
official.
Linesmen
Michael McDonough and Simon Long and fourth official Michael Jones may
have heard conversations between Clattenburg and the players because all
four officials wear microphones and ear pieces that allow them to hear
what each other is saying during the game.
“A referee’s microphone is on open. Everything he says is heard by (his or her) assistants,” Poll told BBCRadio 5 live.
“So if Mark said something, the assistants would have heard it.”
Clattenburg, no stranger to controversy, was criticised by Chelsea manager Roberto Di Matteo for “ruining” the match.
While
Ivanovic could have few complaints after accidentally impeding Ashley
Young when the winger was through on goal, the decision to show Torres a
second yellow for diving sparked outrage on and off the pitch as he
appeared to be clipped.
“We must be disappointed that key decisions were wrong,” Di Matteo told reporters.
“At
2-2, we looked like the team that was going to win the game. It was a
good game between good teams and the official ruined it. Key decisions
have to be right and you don’t want the referees to have such a big
influence.
“I
think it’s obvious in the eyes of everybody that the second yellow for
Fernando was wrong. It was a foul for us and probably he should have
booked their player.
“Their
winning goal was an offside goal. It’s a shame a game like that had to
be decided by officials in that manner. Surely when he sees it, he will
realise that he made big mistakes.”
Torres’
Spanish compatriot Juan Mata, who brought Chelsea back into the game at
2-1 with a stunning free kick, said Torres’s dismissal was
“incomprehensible”.
“But
I prefer to focus on the positives from the game – we competed against a
great opponent and responded well to falling behind,” he added.
An
investigation is also being carried by the Metropolitan Police into how
a Stamford Bridge steward was injured following Hernandez’s winner.
Objects were also seen to be thrown on to the pitch from the stands
during the fractious match.
Despite
trailing 2-0 and clawing their way back to 2-2, Sunday’s defeat was
Chelsea’s first in the Premier League this season but they remained top
of the table on 22 points from their opening nine games – one point
clear of Manchester United and champions Manchester City.
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