Showing posts with label Iliman Ndiaye. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iliman Ndiaye. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 February 2025

LIVERPOOL AND ARNE SLOT LEFT FUMING OVER 5 MICHAEL OLIVER DECISIONS AGAINST EVERTON

Liverpool boss Arne Slot was sent off in the wake of the final whistle against Everton. That came after Michael Oliver caused frustration with multiple decisions.


Michael Oliver during Everton vs Liverpool. (Image: Liverpool FC/Liverpool FC via Getty Images)


Liverpool won't want to hide behind excuses for the draw against Everton. Arne Slot will not be pleased with how his side got sucked into the madness, not for the first time in this fixture — but there's little doubt that refeee Michael Oliver complicated the task for the Reds.

From the first whistle, everything seemed to be going against Liverpool. Bitty fouls were called against the visitor and allowed to slide for the host: Slot's side were hauled up for a foul every 59.7 seconds that Everton had the ball in play.

But as well as this general complaint of poor match control, Oliver incurred the wrath of the Liverpool faithful in several specific incidents. The most high-profile came late on, when Virgil van Dijk and Ibrahima Konate were both denied VAR reprieves on the Everton equalizer, but there were flashpoints throughout the game.

Foul by Alexis Mac Allister on Iliman Ndiaye

Everton took the lead in the 11th minute, catching Liverpool out with a well-worked free kick that was finished off neatly by Beto. There was a check for offside, but replays showed that the striker was narrowly onside.

So what's the problem? Well, the free kick quite clearly should not have been awarded in the first place.

This is beyond VAR's remit, so it is up to Oliver to get it right on the pitch. Unfortunately, he completely fell for Iliman Ndiaye's dive.

For that is what it was. This wasn't a case of going down easily or manufacturing contact — Ndiaye simply cheated, throwing himself to the ground to hoodwink Oliver into believing Alexis Mac Allister made any kind of contact.

Oliver bought it. An understandable mistake, but particularly jarring in a game where he steadfastly refused to give anything soft to Liverpool.

In normal circumstances, I'd be calling for the lesser-spotted retrospective diving ban to be applied against Ndiaye; this is a rare case where the officials were successfully deceived by a deliberate act, and the consequences were massive. But judging by the way he departed the pitch 10 minutes later, we might not be seeing him for a long time anyway.

Yellow card for Andy Robertson

In fairness, plenty of Liverpool fans were more annoyed at Andy Robertson than Oliver for this one. But it was deeply frustrating when the Scot saw yellow early on for kicking the ball away.

It's the kind of incident that often goes unpunished. Robertson could just about argue that he was already committed to playing the ball before the whistle blew — if I'm being honest, he definitely had time to pull out of it, but there's typically a degree of leeway.

Oliver chose not to apply that approach, leaving Robertson with a long time to handle his booking. As with so many complaints against referees, it boils down to consistency.

Later in the contest, for instance, Beto punched the ball away after play had been stopped. Unlike Robertson, he could not even make a case that he was intending to play the ball legitimately, and yet a card was not produced.

Idrissa Gueye avoids second yellow card

Nobody wants to brandish a red card in the derby (except after the final whistle, apparently, when you can look like you're being authoritative with zero consequences for the match). But it was Oliver's job to referee the football match, not the occasion.

As such, he had no right to ignore Idrissa Gueye's brazen pull-back on Mohamed Salah as Liverpool sought to break away. Oliver signaled the advantage, using that to explain his decision amid protests from those in red, but Slot would undoubtedly have preferred to see the opponent reduced to 10 men.


Idrissa Gueye is put under pressure by Mohamed Salah during the Premier League match between Everton and Liverpool. (Image: Carl Recine/Getty Images)


It was, after all, a textbook yellow card. Gueye made no attempt for the ball, dragging Salah back in order to stop the attack — had he not been on a yellow already, there would have been no question about it.

Everton will say that Conor Bradley benefited from similar lenience later on. But the Northern Irishman's second foul was far less of a nailed-on bookable offense.

Carlos Alcaraz not penalized for foul on Mohamed Salah

Despite playing into these headwinds, Liverpool had managed to take the lead. It was holding onto its advantage as the match entered five minutes of stoppage time.

The goal, of course, was to take the sting out of the game, and keep the ball up at Everton's end of the field. Salah sought to do just that, jinking past two Everton players before being hacked down by substitute Carlos Alcaraz near the edge of the area.

Of all the incidents Oliver allowed to slide, this was perhaps the most brazen. It's just inexplicable how he decided it was not a foul.

And the consequences proved to be dire. Rather than getting the chance to run down the clock a little more and perhaps work the free kick into the corner, Liverpool was forced onto the back foot, and Everton ultimately equalized.

There was not enough of a causal link for VAR to get involved. But it seems near-certain that Liverpool would have won the match if Oliver had not got this easy decision horribly wrong.

Everton's equalizer

I'll bundle the complaints about the equalizing goal into one section, but there was plenty to aggrieve Liverpool. For one thing, it came more than two minutes beyond the amount of time added on.

Of course, the referee has the power to extend play beyond the indicated "minimum", and Oliver was right to do so. A clash of heads between two Everton players did delay the contest.

But it's rare for match officials to genuinely reflect all additional stoppages when extending the amount of added time. Oliver certainly gave Everton every possible chance to find a second goal.

Then there was the offside check. It was very tight, resulting in a single green line being shown to viewers — that means that the decision fell within the Premier League's "tolerance", in which case the advantage goes to the attacker.

In other words, Abdoulaye Doucoure may well have been beyond Van Dijk. Unfortunately, the technology is not up to scratch.

Finally, there was a foul on Konate by Beto. Again, bear in mind that Oliver had been penalizing Liverpool for the smallest of infringements (and non-existent fouls) all game.

Yet despite looking right at it, Oliver did not see fit to punish Beto, even though he clearly impeded Konate. VAR left it alone as well.

Disallowing the goal would have caused absolute pandemonium at Goodison Park. You'd hope that didn't come into the thinking of Oliver and the VAR team — but this was a fitting end to a match where the officials did not appear fit to cope with the demands of the fixture.

- James Martin

Wednesday, 5 February 2025

MAJOR PREMIER LEAGUE ANNOUNCEMENT LAUGHABLE AFTER MYLES LEWIS-SKELLY'S ERLING HAALAND JIBE

Arsenal youngster Myles Lewis-Skelly copied Erling Haaland's celebration after scoring against Manchester City at the weekend and in its wake the Premier League have taken laughable action



This is quite simply getting out of hand. According to Sky Sports, the Premier League will monitor player goal celebrations and may consider sanctions if they feel they are damaging the reputation of the game or could inflame opposition fans or players.

What on Earth is the world coming to? Let’s park the rather eerie Arsenal link for one second and take this at face value.

Iliman Ndiaye was booked for imitating a seagull when scoring for Everton against Brighton. Brilliant, loved it, very funny and who in their right mind is getting mad at a man flapping his arms like a bird after scoring?

Next time someone scores against the Gunners, if they want to imitate a cannon (that might require some help from teammates but I’d love to see it) go for it. Who is it hurting? These are harmless, light-hearted bits of fun in a game which has seemingly lost touch with some of what made it such an enjoyable spectacle.

I would understand if what we were witnessing was a string of very inflammatory perhaps derogatory performances from players. But a man pretended to be a bird…

It did not come out in the aftermath of Ndiaye’s show of appreciation for ornithology, which occurred more than ten days ago. It has come out in the wake of the Arsenal youngster’s apt response to the needle seen between the two sides earlier in the campaign where the aforementioned Norwegian striker in a face-off with the Hale End graduate was alleged to have muttered, “Who are you?” Or words to that effect.

In the most perfect way possible, Lewis-Skelly in an utter trouncing of Manchester City responded on the football pitch with a goal and celebration which purely copied Haaland’s pose. It’s not the first time we’ve seen it either, Kylian Mbappe and his then-PSG teammates did it after knocking Borussia Dortmund out of the UEFA Champions League.

Was much made of that? Barely a whisper.

All this does is further fuel the fire that Arsenal fans in particular feel there is an undercurrent that goes against them. Some of the decisions made, not just this season but in previous campaigns, have been very questionable.

Lewis-Skelly was only able to play against Man City after an independent panel overturned a three-match ban given to the 18-year-old after a red card brandished by Michael Oliver for what was certainly a classic cynical yellow card challenge. The same referee who sent off Leandro Trossard for kicking the ball away less than a second after his whistle was blown, moments after Jeremy Doku had too delayed a restart earlier on in the same game.

The same official who sent off Gabriel Martinelli for two yellow cards in the same phase of play. Something many had never seen before and none of us have seen since.

Arsenal have been punished in title races by VAR failing to spot blatant offsides which gifted the likes of Brentford an equaliser in the week before the Gunners would face title rivals Manchester City. Declan Rice sent off for a nudge of the ball, again an incident we have seen players go unpunished for time and time again since, be it Dominik Szoboszlai, Boubacar Kamara, Luis Diaz, the list goes on.

Jason Cundy has warned that Lewis-Skelly needs to be careful, when speaking on talkSPORT, making reference to Roy Keane’s career-affecting challenge on Alf-Inge Haaland.

"Just doing that... I'm not convinced it's the wisest thing to do because, you know, so long, plenty of years to come.

"You wait. You know, we saw what Roy Keane did to Haaland's dad. You know, just be careful what battles you pick."

For those reading that may have suddenly become slightly confused by the words of Cundy. No, we’re not speaking after Lewis-Skelly had anything to do with a major injury to Erling Haaland, we’re talking about him copying a goal celebration. To insinuate that someone would get so annoyed by a player doing such a thing that Lewis-Skelly could be subjected to something like we saw between Keane and Alf-Inge Haaland is… well words actually fail me here, none come to mind to accurately quantify the madness of such a statement.

The footballing world went mad a long time ago and some of the things we’re seeing will hardly surprise everyone. Yet what we have entered is seemingly a period where players like Lewis-Skelly, who scored in one of the biggest games of the season, from left-back against the champions is not lauded for his talent but instead the centre of a rethink of celebrations. What a sad, sad day for the sport.

- Tom Canton

Wednesday, 24 January 2024

GUINEA 0-2 SENEGAL - ABDOULAYE SECK AND ILIMAN NDIAYE GOALS SEND SENEGAL THROUGH WITH PERFECT RECORD, CAMEROON SNEAK IN


Abdoulaye Seck and Iliman Ndiaye scored as Senegal beat Guinea 2-0 in their final group match of the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations. Cameroon's dramatic 3-2 win over The Gambia means they go through as the second-place team but Guinea will still go through as the one of the best third-place teams in the group stage. Senegal maintain a perfect record.

Senegal secured top spot in Group C at the Africa Cup of Nations following a 2-0 victory over Guinea.

The reigning champions progress to the knockout stages with a 100 per cent record after second-half goals from Abdoulaye Seck and Iliman Ndiaye sealed maximum points at Stade de Yamoussoukro.

Following a stop-start first half, Senegal took the lead just after the hour mark when Seck powerfully headed home from Krepin Diatta’s free-kick.

Sadio Mane, who missed an open goal earlier on, thought he had wrapped up the points when he slotted past Ibrahim Kone five minutes from time, but was denied by the offside flag.

However, Aliou Cisse’s side did get their second goal in the dying moments following a devastating counter, with Mane finding Ndiaye in acres of space and the substitute sweeping home.

With that, Senegal sealed first place in Group C ahead of Cameroon, who snatched second place from Guinea following their dramatic 3-2 victory over Gambia.