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Graham Poll's Verdict.....

.........Torres was a disgrace but I sense the hand of Jose in this cowardly assault


Fernando Torres should face at least a three-match ban for his spiteful, cowardly assault on Tottenham defender Jan Vertonghen and the FA has the power to enforce such a punishment.

The incident, six minutes into the second half, was played out in all its ugliness on video replays.

Torres was chasing another lost cause down the touchline and petulantly tripped Vertonghen. The foul was needless and probably caused by Torres’ frustration at being shackled so effectively by the Belgian.

Referee Mike Dean saw the trip, but his view was not clear of the follow-up by the Spaniard, who grabbed his opponent and appeared to try and press a thumb into his face and scratch his cheek with his fingers.

You could see the spite on Torres’ face and there appeared to be an intention to cause harm. There is no place on the football field for such actions, which rugby sees too often and always cites and punishes with video evidence.

Let’s be clear here — Torres should have been sent off. And as the violent incident was clearly missed by all of the match officials, the FA can now have the incident reviewed by their disciplinary panel, which must surely recommend a suspension.

I would expect Dean to confirm that he would have sent off Torres had he had the chance to see the incident — any select group referee would have done so.

Torres later got his comeuppance when he was red-carded following an aerial clash with Vertonghen.

That’s where Jose Mourinho enters the drama. The Chelsea manager is a past master a creating smokescreens to try to cover up wrongdoing from his stars and pointing the finger at Vertonghen’s actions following Torres’s jump at him is merely that.
Mourinho tried to make the Spurs player the villain of the piece, suggesting that he pretended to have been assaulted by Torres.

At full speed it did look as though Torres had jumped into Vertonghen and the defender’s reaction did not help Dean in determining what disciplinary action was correct.

Video replays confirmed that, in fact, Torres made little contact with the Spurs player, who was perhaps frustrated at still having to face the Spaniard despite being assaulted 30 minutes earlier.

The defender should be complimented for not reacting during the first incident. But it is a pity he did not do the same after the second as, by going to ground in dramatic fashion, he gave ammunition to Mourinho, who jumped on the opportunity to apportion blame.

Indeed, I wouldn’t be surprised if Torres’ actions at White Hart Lane could be linked back to Mourinho. We know from the past that the Portuguese can draw the best from players by ‘winding them up’ before a match.

He likes his players to play with fire in their bellies and that was certainly the case with Torres here as he tried to take the opportunity to show his manager that he is a better option than Samuel Eto’o.
Mourinho had painted himself as a ‘Mr Happy’ when he returned to the Premier League. On Saturday we saw evidence of the old dark arts as he created mischief in an attempt to protect his players.

This will be the first case to be adjudicated by the FA’s new disciplinary panel and it will be fascinating to see what suspension Torres finally faces. I hope justice is done and a suspension of at least three games for violent conduct is served.

I also hope it’s a one-off from Torres, who looked like he was returning to form and should not need to resort to scratching and gouging.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2437633/Fernando-Torres-disgrace-Chelsea-v-Tottenham-GRAHAM-POLL.html#ixzz2gN2A1CyM
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posted on 30/9/13

Lots of things wrong in that challenge:

Torres jumps into Vertonghen, leading with his arm and turns his back on the challenge .

Vertonghen, who wins the ball, makes a standing jump, arms raised for leverage in the usual way. It is only his arms that protect him from Torres' leading arm.

Both fall to the floor holding their heads..presumably Verts to kids the ref he got an elbow and Torres because he probably felt guilty and was trying to avoid a booking

OR alternatively, and something not considered by anyone....TORRES was trying to get Vertonghen (already booked) sent off.

It was a foul, it was late on Vertonghen, he won the ball. Regardless of elbows, it was a forceful clumsy late challenge and probably deserved a booking...and given Torres' aggressive attitude in the 2nd half you cannot blame the ref for reaching the conclusion he did regarding the intent of the challenge.

comment by GOODBYE (U1029)

posted on 30/9/13

Devonshire

comment by GOODBYE (U1029)

posted on 30/9/13

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/09/28/article-2436540-18580CD300000578-621_634x444.jpg

posted on 30/9/13

I think the BBC have a lot to answer for in this whole sorry row.

Through a toe cringing interviewer they gave great prominence to the Chelsea manager, giving him 3 times as long on the match report video as they gave to AVB and did not once ask him about the face gouging incident.

And they gave much more prominence to this video over the coming 24 hours on their front page, and even now it is the lead story on the Tottenham page of the BBC website. All with misleading headlines giving the impression that, without doubt, Vertonghen is guilty of actions that are a "disgrace".

This sucking up to certain teams and certain personalities in the game has got to stop, and as the matter is subject to FA investigation should be subject to the same rules of comment of cases in law that are subject to judicial review.

posted on 30/9/13

However, Vertonghen went down with the intent of conning the ref to get Torres sent off.


Serial, you really cannot be serious can you? How do you know what Verthongen's intentions were? Only he knows.

However I do not think that Torres deserved to be booked for that particular incident. The key point is that he should not have been on the pitch after doing the scratching & pressing his thumb into Verts face. That was a straight in anyone's book.

By the way, at least Townsend has come out & admitted he dived and apologised to both the referee & fans alike! Just waiting for an Arsenal player to do similar................................................

comment by GOODBYE (U1029)

posted on 30/9/13

Cazorla

posted on 30/9/13

"By the way, at least Townsend has come out & admitted he dived and apologised to both the referee & fans alike! Just waiting for an Arsenal player to do similar.."

I think youre expecting way too much from Pires...

comment by HRH (U15236)

posted on 30/9/13

I thought Torres went in a bit dirtily on Dembele in the immediate challenge before the Vertonghen one.

Looked like he was going with his elbow on Mousa a little, then as it broke to Vertonghen he saw his chance to 'do' Jan at a run. Jan was a bit to clever for him though

posted on 30/9/13

If you watch the footage of the full Torres challenge you will see Torres arm appears to catch Vertonghen in the head as they both land. There was nothing intentional in that part, but thats why Vertonghen was rubbing his head

http://www.soccer-blogger.com/2013/09/28/video-fernando-torres-red-card-vs-tottenham-2013-sent-off-spurs-chelsea-september/

posted on 1/10/13

Anybody who thinks that Torres had no intent on that challenge is a damned idiot and thats that.

By all means try to wind opposition fans up but dont make yourself look a total plank while you do it its plain embarrassing.

Torres should have marched for the gouge and deserved a 2nd yellow for the jump full stop. Anybody who does not see that or claims otherwise is simply an idiot or a liar.

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