hatterson
Registered User
And people wonder why I hate Fellaini. He's just simply not good enough to be playing for a team that wants to be where United should be.
and people wonder why i hate fellaini. He's just simply not good enough to be playing for a team that wants to be where united should be.
Didn't see the match but saw the tackle. Rojo should've seen red, no question. Shocking "tackle".
Yea in normal games that would have been a red, but the ref already set the tone by only giving Barry a warning earlier on a clear yellow offense.
I don't really buy that.
Giving a warning vs a yellow card is a lot less severe than giving a yellow for a clear red. It's a different scale.
At the beginning of the season Fellaini was played in a deep role with Pogba and was a total anchor to the latter.Well actually Barry committed three fouls worthy of a yellow in the game, only getting one, so the point still stands.
The video clip is hilariously embarrassing but to be fair, Fellaini did play well early in the season and the stats backed it up. He was played in a role where his strenthgs came through. Then something happened (Herrera and Carrick stepped up?) and it's been all uphill.
This is how close Liverpool were to being up 4-1 yesterday:
For as brutal as Boruc was on the first two goals, that proved to be a turning point in the match. That and the introduction of Ryan Fraser.
This game for now on should be like the first two rules of fight club, we dont talk about it
Well actually Barry committed three fouls worthy of a yellow in the game, only getting one, so the point still stands.
Not sure what the point you are referring to is.
The different between a foul and a yellow is much smaller than a yellow vs a straight red. I didn't see three yellows from Barry in that game but that's just me, and I guess Michael Oliver.
His first tackle on Ibra is a yellow in 95% of matches. The handball he got called for should have easily been a yellow as well as it stopped a United counter attack.
But you assume that everything happens the same after he gets his first theoretical yellow. That's a false assumption.
I could say the same thing about Rojo's tackle. If a card or two has already been shown, maybe he only goes in with one foot instead of the stupid "tackle" he did. Probably not since it was so stupid, but either way, both sides had missed cards.
There's no doubt that Rojo gets a red in the vast majority of games, but if you're applying the "who knows what happens if the start changes" then you have to apply that to how Rojo played too.
I think that's different. That's one incident as opposed to many.