Are Tony Pulis’ views so farfetched?

Stoke City boss Tony Pulis has proposed a radical shake up of how referees are assessed in the Premier League, proposing that there should be a relegation system where the referees who have performed the worst over a season are relegated to the Championship. The proposal comes after a number of high profile incidents where Stoke have been on the end of some very poor referring decisions.

“It cannot be right that these decisions consistently go on without being addressed,” he told Sky Sports News ahead of the clash with Birmingham on Tuesday.

He explained: “Over the weekend I have thought about it and I want to be constructive, so I think we should put in place a system where every Premier League club has a vote at the end of the season on referees, and the bottom three referees should be relegated to the Championship and the top three referees from the Championship should be promoted.”

It is not right to place referees under such pressures. The problem with the proposal is who will mark the referees? If the managers are involved, a massive bone of contention arises. For example, take Mark Clattenburg’s decision for Nani’s goal at Old Trafford. Harry Redknapp blasted the ref for making the wrong call, whilst Sir Alex Ferguson concluded that the referee had made the correct decision, in the laws of the game. That decision is based on opinion. Some will say he got it right, others will disagree but it is wrong that the referee could be at risk of relegation by the say so of managers. The relationship between managers and referees is strained enough without bringing in such complicated measures.

As well as this, managers, players and fans all want to see the referee use as much common sense as possible when referring the game. If this system was brought into place, every single decision the referee took could be examined. This could lead to referees slowing the game down, making sure that every decision is as clinical as possible. Of course we want to see as many decisions as possible dealt with correctly but at the cost of common sense? It is a dangerous policy, and one that the Football Association shouldn’t take seriously.

However, this debate hopefully will open referees up. After games, what is wrong with the referee coming out and explaining a decision? It would save us all thirty minutes of Andy Gray ref bashing to start. Secondly, it would clear situations up. The more we speculate about referee’s decisions the easier it becomes to level abuse at them. On past occasions when referee’s have come out and explained decisions, the whole atmosphere is calmed. If we know why the referee came to a certain conclusion then we accept it and move on. The referee shouldn’t have to explain every single decision but it would be obvious to everyone the major decision over the course of a weekend that would need clarity.

Referees must be accountable for the job they are doing, that is obvious. Is it fair to judge certain referee’s so openly. If a referee makes a high profile mistake, they are moved off top flight duties. After all we are involved in a sport that is based on opinion, and we all see decisions in different ways. So referee’s make mistakes, but we shouldn’t lower the standard of our game to punish them so openly.

No referee does it on purpose, or have a vendetta against a team. Stoke City are on a bad run of form – of course Tony Pulis is deflecting attention away from that. We should not take these proposals seriously. We need to get behind the men in black, rather than hang them out to dry. Mistakes are a fact of life. Until we introduce technology to help the referee’s we have to accept that mistakes are an inevitable part of English football.

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THREE United players that I’m happy to see leave in January

With the transfer window fast approaching and Manchester United starting to hit form, rocking the boat might seem a little strange. However, there are still a few issues at Old Trafford that need to be resolved. There are three players that could be sold off in January to make way for better players, or players that will offer a bit more to the squad. We look at one Manchester United fan’s opinion on three players that should be sold this Janaury. You do not have to agree.

Gabriel Obertan

The French winger is not good enough to play for Manchester United. He has offered the club very little since his arrival from Bordeaux and with Valencia returning after Christmas why do Manchester United need to keep him? In the Carling Cup this season he hardly shined against Scunthorpe or Wolves and has looked out of his depth against Premiership defenders. Obertan has pace, and that is a great asset in the Premier League, but he has nothing to go with it. He has a poor first touch and his delivery into the box is erratic. He scored a superb goal against Bursaspor in the Champions League, but apart from that what else has he done? Gabriel Obertan is another David Bellion and Manchester United should cash in come January.

Wes Brown

The Manchester United defender’s time at the club has probably come to an end. He has been a loyal servant to the club but does he possess the ability to warrant a first team place? The answer is no, so why keep the lad? At the start of his career, terrible injuries plagued him – had they not occurred I doubt this would be an issue. Manchester United have settled on a right back, have invested heavily in young centre backs, clearly Wes Brown’s time at the club is at an end. He is still Premier League quality, and could rejuvenate his career elsewhere. Playing football is better than sitting on the bench and Brown should opt to play football. Manchester United fans would be far happier to see Evans and Smalling battle it out for third choice centre half ahead of Brown.

Owen Hargreaves

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Six months ago I never thought I would write something like that. Just to clarify one thing. Manchester United fans would not want to see the back of Owen Hargreaves, but it’s time for Sir Alex Ferguson to end his Manchester United career. In a couple of weeks I could be proven totally wrong, but after the last six months I fear I wont be. After Owen Hargreaves’ break down against Wolves in November how long can Manchester United wait? Will he ever be calm enough to be selected to play? Will it all get on top of him again – will the stress make another injury more likely? For the player himself how many set backs can he have? Sure, being told his Manchester United career was over would be tough, but what would another set back do for his mindset? Owen Hargreaves was a fantastic purchase for Manchester United and did the club proud. However, this January I feel it’s time for Sir Alex Ferguson to say enough is enough. Manchester United need clarity on the situation, I sincerely hope I am wrong but I don’t believe we will see Owen Hargreaves play in a United shirt again.

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FA Cup: Leeds United 1 Arsenal 3

Arsenal flexed its proverbial muscle with a 3-1 victory over Leeds in their third-round FA Cup replay at Elland Road on Wednesday.The English Premier League powerhouse made clear its intentions after just five minutes when Samir Nasri coolly poked the ball past United goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel to hand the Londoners the lead.

This was in stark contrast to their third-round proper clash at the Emirates, when Cesc Fabregas scored a 90th-minute penalty to get Arsene Wenger’s side out of jail and into a replay.

Defender Bacary Sagna double Arsenal’s lead in the 35th minute with a powerful strike, with Schmeichel unable to stop the shot from flying into the top left corner of the net despite getting one hand to the ball.

Wenger’s men did not have it all their own way, however, after Leeds midfielder Bradley Johnson scored a screamer in the 37th minute from long range to give the home fans plenty to sing about and Leeds the impetus in their hunt for an equaliser.

But the injection of star pair Fabregas and Robin van Persie on 71 minutes proved an inspired move from Wenger, with the latter heading home a well-weighted Nicklas Bendtner cross five minutes later to seal the win for Arsenal.

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Arsenal will host League One club Huddersfield Town in their fourth-round affair on January 30 at the Emirates.

FIVE things we learnt from Liverpool today?

Joe Cole may not have contributed much since his summer signing, but a last ditch winner may just have saved his manager’s Anfield career.

It was a fantastic turnaround for Liverpool in the second half and the nature of the 2-1 victory against a good Bolton team may just prove the kick-start Roy Hodgson’s team needs. Steve Gerrard was an absolute colossus in the second half and he was a driving force behind Liverpool’s win today.

So how did Liverpool fans feel about today, and what are the five things we learnt about the Reds this afternoon?

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Wenger relying on THREE Gunners to turn it round?

After Arsenal suffered a shock 1-0 defeat to Championship outfit Ipswich in the first leg of the semi-final of the Carling Cup at Portman Road a fortnight ago, the Premier League giants have been left with the task of overturning the deficit at The Emirates Stadium this evening. Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger will be relying on his big guns to get the job done, and they don’t come any bigger at the moment than Robin van Persie.

Dutch forward van Persie has been in a rich vein of form in recent weeks, scoring a hat-trick in Arsenal’s most recent Premier League encounter against Wigan, and his return to the cup competition will be a welcome one for the Gunners. I wouldn’t be surprised if he netted again tonight as he’ll certainly be in the mood for it and such be the first player you select in your Picklive TRIO tonight.

If you look at the first leg at Portman Road, it was Arsenal players who dominated the points scoring. Denilson completed a massive 108 passes over the course of the 90 minutes, helping him rack up a huge 133 Picklive points. If the Brazilian starts tonight, expect him to put many of Arsenal’s attacks in motion and enjoy relative control in the middle of the park.

With Arsenal having to come from a goal down to make the final at Wembley, you can expect Wenger to pick a strong starting eleven, and thus one that contains captain Cesc Fabregas. The Spanish midfielder was awesome at The Emirates at the weekend and also broke the 100 points barrier in the first leg of the Carling Cup semi-final, so he’ll certainly be one to watch and therefore to select tonight.

As far as Ipswich are concerned, Paul Jewell will be conveying to his players the fact that they have a great opportunity tonight to reach a final and make a name for themselves. That’s exactly what Tamas Priskin did in the first leg, so will he be the man to do it tonight or will another Tractor Boy step forward?

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It’s very hard to look past Arsenal tonight, as Arsene Wenger and his team won’t want to miss out on an opportunity to get one step closer to some elusive silverware. Therefore your Picklive selection is likely to be dominated by Gunners, with van Persie, Denilson and Fabregas somewhere near the top of the list. So what are you waiting for? Make your Picklive selections now!

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Copa del Rey wrap: Barca, Real set up Spanish showpiece

Barcelona and Real Madrid set up a tantalising Copa del Rey final after both posted wins in their semi-final second leg matches.

Leading 5-0 after the first leg with Almeria, Barca scored another three goals in the away leg to run out comfortable 3-0 winners at the Estadio de los Juegos Mediterraneos.

Despite resting Lionel Messi, Xavi, David Villa and Andres Iniesta, Pep Guardiola’s men still had far too much firepower for Almeria, who they thumped 8-0 in their last league meeting on November 20.

Brazilian defender Adriano opened the scoring after 34 minutes before Thiago Alcantara doubled the advantage eight minutes after half-time.

Dutch midfielder Ibrahim Afellay added the third after 66 minutes as Barca progress to just their second Copa del Rey final in 13 seasons.

Real Madrid were less convincing in their semi-final, and after enjoying a 1-0 away win over Sevilla in the first leg they posted a 2-0 victory on Wednesday.

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Germany international Mesut Oezil opened the scoring in the 82nd minute before substitute Emmanuel Adebayor scored on his home debut to seal a 3-0 aggregate result over the holders.

The April 20 final will be Real’s first in the Copa del Rey since their 2004 defeat to Real Zaragoza.

An old problem rearing its ugly head at the Emirates?

Abou Diaby’s petulant match-turning red card against Newcastle was just the latest in a long line of controversial incidents on and off the pitch involving Arsenal’s players this season, which begs the question, is ill-discipline becoming a very real problem for the club to deal with?

Glancing at the statistics, Arsenal already have the third worst disciplinary record in the Premier League this season, which boasts a rather unenviable record of 6 red cards and 44 yellow cards. Contrast this with last season’s total of 56 yellows and 1 red card, which left them as the club with the third best disciplinary record in the league and the difference is startling.

Diaby’s red card was fully deserved at St James’ Park and his reaction was simply unacceptable. His dismissal came hot on the heals of another controversy involving the club; this time surrounding captain Cesc Fabregas and his supposed comments to the match official at half-time during the club’s home fixture against Everton.

David Moyes, not usually a manager to stick his ore unnecessarily into other people’s business, let alone court controversy, alluded to the fact that Fabregas questioned the referee’s integrity in the tunnel at half-time for allowing Louis Saha’s dubiously offside goal to stand.

Moyes opined: “Cesc Fabregas should have been sent off at half-time in the tunnel for the comments at the officials coming up the tunnel. It was disgusting.” Moyes later went onto clear things up a little better and it has since emerged that Fabregas asked fourth official Lee Mason how much Everton were paying him to swing the game in their favour – a ludicrous suggestion it has to be said.

It appears frustration got the better of Fabregas on this occasion. You simply cannot question the integrity of Everton football club and the match officials in the manner that he did. All it does is add fuel to the fire and it does nothing more than put manager Arsene Wenger immediately on the defensive after the result. At a time when the only topics Wenger should be discussing are his side’s fantastic comeback or the great resilience shown by his title contenders, he has to waste his time discussing incidents outside of his control.

But that is the point entirely – just how much control does Wenger have over this Arsenal side?

He is a father figure at the club, that much is beyond question, and he was also the main reason that Fabregas decided to stay in the summer despite overtures from his boyhood club Barcelona. This Arsenal side is the best team that Wenger has had at his disposal for the past 4-5 years and they remain Man Utd’s main challengers for the title this season.

They are not particularly bad natured, nor are they especially dirty, but there is a petulance that bubbles beneath the surface throughout the whole side and the manager has to take some credit for this. Wenger is widely known for his less than humble post-match remarks to the press, particularly in defeat and perhaps this attitude has seeped through to some of his players somewhat.

Jack Wilshere too was fortunate to escape FA censure over his comments via his Twitter feed after the Newcastle game where he questioned the quality of the decision-making of referee Phil Dowd. In all honesty, Wilshere made a sound enough point and Dowd did have a poor day at the office, but surely the club has to have a blanket set of guidelines for players on social networking sites? If they don’t, they should certainly look to install one in the near future.

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Over at Liverpool, the furore that surrounded Ryan Babel after he posted a mocked up photo of Howard Webb in a Man Utd shirt proved to be the straw that broke the camel’s back and he was out of the club within a matter of days.

It wasn’t necessarily what Wilshere said that was the main problem, it was the fact that it led to another series of difficult and needless questions for his manager to face. Wilshere, of course, is no stranger to trouble and the player in question has been involved in numerous scuffles off the pitch since his breakthrough into the Arsenal starting eleven, and while he’ll certainly mature with age, his penchant for getting himself into hot water is a worrying aspect to accompany his developing career.

On the pitch, this Arsenal side plays to the strict blueprint laid out by their astute manager, but off the pitch, Wenger seems to have a little more difficulty controlling this talented group of players.

A siege mentality is a great thing to have, especially if you can harness it to your benefit. Certain sides such as Liverpool and Chelsea thrive under one. But with the spotlight focussing on Arsenal’s title challenge at the moment, the sheer amount of newsworthy controversies dogging the club only serves to highlight that a degree of discipline needs to be brought back to the Emirates, before it has the potential to derail any title ambitions the club may harbour this campaign.

Who needs Hollywood when you’ve got Hernandez

Goal II was on television the other day. You know the one, it’s the second film in the Hollywood football trilogy about a wide eyed Mexican everyman puppy thing who dreams of becoming an unrealistic footballer and bedding a Geordie nurse. I’m still undecided on Goal II. I’ve decided it’s bad of course, obviously, but I’m undecided whether it’s bad enough to be good, or just simply bad. It’s better than Goal I, by which I mean it’s worse, making it much better at being bad, and thus closer to being good, than it’s predecessor – which isn’t remotely bad enough to be good, merely just bad enough to be bad – but certainly not on a par of badness with Goal III, which isn’t even good enough to be considered bad in the first place it’s so terrible, and thus clearly unable to be bad enough to be good, if you catch my drift.

I think I’ve decided that I don’t think it is. Bad enough that is. I think it retains just enough goodness to be merely bad, though it does put in a sterling effort towards the end by way of a comically fascinating Champions League Final tussle with Arsenal and their imaginary wunderkind TJ Harper (the kind of ludicrous Americanised name dreamed up by someone called Brock in a lunch meeting in LA) and some fantastically Shaolin Soccer-esque swerving kung fu super shots. Not to mention the fact that both teams seem to be playing with at least four strikers, what with the film’s writers clearly unable to invent any imaginary characters that could possibly be, say, combative defensive midfielders and not clichéd party boy forwards who score a suspicious amount of Lineker-esque tap ins that can be conveniently filmed from behind the goal.

Where Goal II succeeds in it’s goodness (or badness) however, is in this very same overblown comic book drama. Goal I played it too safe in a presumed attempt to be realistic. It downplayed the footballing romance to the perfectly imaginable (well, for the time) task of getting a still Shearer-some Newcastle into Champions League qualification, and whilst that’s all very commendable in a “well that could’ve plausibly happened” type of a way, real football often works on a much higher platform of romance and wish fulfillment than it’s cinematic counterpart.

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Take the case of Javier Hernandez, Manchester United’s very own wide eyed Mexican everyman puppy thing, who has been busily going about the business of scoring dramatic late winners in important Premiership and Champions League ties for seven months now without anyone batting an eyelid or even having to suffer the obligatory turbulent beginnings/middle period where he falls over in the rain a lot and gets bullied by Gary Neville. In fact such a dream start has “The Little Pea” (a name that’s encouraged me to now codify my  trips to the bathroom as “going for a Chicharito”, much to everyone’s annoyance) made that if his first season in Manchester were to be adapted into a mega-bucks Hollywood franchise, no one would take it seriously.

Sports dramas often suffer from his paradox, in stark contrast to most other biopic genres, where the dramatisation of events only serves to make them less interesting than their real world counterparts. The best footballing narratives would stretch the credibility of a film and have you yearning for the days of Sean Bean taking a last minute penalty against a suspiciously fat Man United side despite it being his first professional start and him clearly pushing forty.

Hernandez’s meteoric rise has also evaded the usual media rights of passage hype by virtue of the fact he isn’t English. With less domestic starts and more goals than Andy ‘£35m’ Carroll and more World Cup strikes to his name than Wayne Rooney the boy is a genuinely brilliant find, and it’s not hard to imagine the red top clamor had he been snapped up as a product of the Maidstone youth set up a la Chris Smalling and not arrived by way of the Mexican scouting system. Even more significantly, Sir Alex Ferguson seems to have seen the potential of a first team partnership with Rooney, leapfrogging even the Solskjaer-like cult super sub expectations of United’s most optimistic fans.

At 22, his progress shows no signs of abating any time soon, baring a jinx-worthy Michael Owen like crock-attack, and if his pride filled badge-kissing enthusiasm is anything to go by (which if the history of badge kissing has taught us anything, it’s not) then he could very well end up as one of those players who’s name unexpectedly creeps up on the all time Premiership scorers list like a Hasselbaink or Heskey before his time in England is out. Forget the signing of the season, he could be the signing of the decade. Which considering it’s only one year old, is already looking a good bet for at least another 12 months.

Screw Hollywood, give me he real world any day.

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You can follow Oscar on Twitter here http://twitter.com/oscarpyejeary where you can find out why he’s taken to drinking solely drinks named after attractive but ultimately useless female tennis players.

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Heynckes the ideal candidate, says Bayern chief

Bayern Munich president Uli Hoeness says incumbent manager Jupp Heynckes was always the club’s number one choice.Heynckes is currently the manager of Bayer Leverkusen, who sit second in the Bundesliga, but will leave his post at the BayArena to manage the Bavarian giants next season.

Hoeness admitted Heynckes needed some time to think about the decision but was pleased that the club’s preferred choice had signed on for his third stint with the Bavarian giants.

“He is the candidate we all wished for,” Hoeness said.

“The board had no problems to back this decision. We all agreed that if we could get Heynckes then we should get him, and only him. He knew he was our number one candidate and that we have not talked to anybody else.”

“He did ask for some days to think it through since he has grown close to Bayer Leverkusen over the last two years, he also was very successful with them. But in the end we all knew that we could make it happen to bring him back.”

Hoeness believes that with the appointment of Heynckes, Bayern have a ‘good chance’ of winning next season’s Bundesliga.

Bayern have struggled under Louis van Gaal this season and face a battle to qualify for the Champions League.

But the Bayern president says things will change with the new appointment.

“We are a club striving for success,” he said.

“We want to win titles again next year and I think we have a good chance to do that.”

Rooney to fight ban length

Manchester United’s Wayne Rooney will contest the two-match ban for using inappropriate language, the Football Association confirmed.Rooney plead guilty to the charge on Tuesday, but will contest the severity of his sentence.

If the penalty is downgraded to one game, Rooney will be free to face Manchester City in the FA Cup semi-final on April 17.

The Football Association handed down the charge for ‘the use of offensive, insulting and/or abusive language’ on Monday, following the striker’s foul-mouthed rant after scoring his third goal against West Ham United at the weekend.

With the prospect of missing the City clash and the English Premier League game with Fulham, Rooney accepted the charge but not the resultant penalty.

“Rooney has submitted a claim that the automatic penalty of two games is clearly excessive. A commission will hear the submission on Wednesday,” a statement from the FA read.

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Rooney, who scored a hat-trick in the 4-2 win over West Ham United, issue an apology after the game.

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