Thursday, 20 February 2014

Arsene Wenger: "The referee made the decision that killed the game" - Bayern get lucky advantage due to bad referee decision

First of all this is not one of those bias fan pieces...I do try to be fair and honest even though I am a die hard Arsenal fan, and secondly this isn't a disgruntled fan's ramble either - though I am obviously disappointed in the result. Having said that many readers will probably disagree with me and still think I am looking for excuses when I say that the referee made TWO bad decisions in both awarding Bayern's penalty and sending off Szczesny at the same time.

After a bright start by us, Bayern began to find their way in the match, and somewhat thanks to our heads dropping as a result of Mesut Ozil's previously saved spot kick.

Bayern's much talked about penalty was awarded later on in the first half when Arjen Robben latched onto a chipped ball over the defence. He stretched out a leg aiming to bring the ball down with Szczesny coming out to meet him. Now Robben's touch wasn't great as the ball veered off to the left of goal but there was contact made by the winger and keeper. The ball had passed Robben though but regardless, the ref pointed to the spot and showed Szczesny red.

I've watched it again, and again, oh and again (and a few more times after that) and yes the rules state it's a penalty if there's contact but it's very much Robben ensuring he gets the decision. I can understand if Szczesny full on wipes him out directly in front of him but for me Robben's lost control of the ball. Furthermore, Sagna was back to cover immediately and, regardless of Jamie Redknapp's view on Sky Sports' coverage, if Robben genuinely thought he had the easy chance of getting around Szczesny following the touch (I really don't think he did), he would've just poked the goal into the net to score (rather than have his side take a chance from the spot). Thus, it was not exactly a goal scoring opportunity with the ball running away from goal.

Arjen Robben, known for his theatrics, in action against his former side Chelsea.
It was a decision which changed the game that's for sure and from that point in we faced an uphill struggle with Bayern controlling the rest of the game. In the end we lost by two pretty good goals by Kroos and Muller, there's no denying that, but it's how the game changed from our point of view, after that red card.

Wenger faced the difficult decision of who to bring off for Fabianski (who had another decent game in Szczesny's absence) and Santi Cazorla was the unfortunate player to make way. A bit like when we played Barcelona in the 2006 UEFA Champions League final, he made a bad decision when he brought off Pires following Lehmann's red card in Paris that night. Last night though Ozil should have been Wenger's choice to make way for Fabs, particularly on hindsight - that wonderful thing.

Ozil has faced some criticism recently and last night he looked lost again; a far cry from the player who first arrived at the Emirates Stadium on transfer deadline day. He missed an early penalty last night as he strolled up to his penalty and calmly placed his shot against the strong palm of Manuel Neuer. He didn't seem to recover from his poor penalty.

Lost: Mesut Ozil.
A friend asked me what scoreline I would pick if I depended on it and I said a two nil or three nil Bayern win so I guess overall it ended as I expected. But it really was a game of what ifs though you have to accept it as what's happened has happened.

Is the tie over? Probably. But we faced a two goal deficit going to the Allianz Arena last year and won 2-0 and, if we play like we did then and show the intensity as we did prior to last night's sending off, who's to say we can't turn this tie around.

Click here (opens in new tab) for Wenger's post-match press conference where he also discusses the ref's decision and Ozil.

Thanks for reading and queue the trolling (most probably from non Arsenal fans).

Arsenal v Bayern Munich in 2013 (lost 1-3).

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