roseboy64
Cricket Web Content Updater
Name them then.Find one then.
Fact of the matter is, Man Utd got very lucky with the refereeing decisions.
Name them then.Find one then.
Fact of the matter is, Man Utd got very lucky with the refereeing decisions.
The Ferdinand penalty, the Scholes sending off.Name them then.
On the day, yes. Over the season as a whole we were no more or less lucky than Chelsea or Arsenal.Fact of the matter is, Man Utd got very lucky with the refereeing decisions.
The ball hit his shoulder and anyway that's cancelled out by Scholes not getting a penalty. For Scholes, are you talking about when he pushed down the Wigan player?The Ferdinand penalty, the Scholes sending off.
I wouldn't argue that, I personally didn't think it was a penalty because it hit him so high up on his arm that he couldn't get his arm out of the way. Yes he leaned into it, this was with the original intention of blocking it legally, and then didn't have time to get out of the way once he realized he couldn't.The ball hit his shoulder
I just want to make it clear that I'm not for one second suggest United were some lucky or undeserving of the title. I just think it was a penalty, that's all. If a player moves his arm to the ball & the ball strikes his arm, it should be a penalty. Bennett swallowed that decision as he swallowed the Scholes second (non) booking.
And on Eurosport it was 16.3, but I got it from soccernet, not that it makes much difference.16.2 is what I heard.
He leaned into it definitely, but he didn't move his arm towards it I didn't think. It hit him so high up on his arm, so near to the pivot of the arm that you can't really move that bit of the arm in any direction.I just want to make it clear that I'm not for one second suggesting United were somehow lucky or undeserving of the title. I just think it was a penalty, that's all. If a player moves his arm to the ball & the ball strikes his arm, it should be a penalty. Bennett swallowed that decision, as he swallowed the Scholes second (non) booking.