Infamy... Infamy...
what the FA has said to justify this is obscure, but pales into insignificance against the bans handed out to serious violence missed by the ref in the Man u - Bournmouth game. Mings has now had a 5 match ban for deliberately stamping on the head of the swede. Ibrahimovic has a three match ban for elbowing Mings, presumably in retaliation and leading to him being pushed to the ground and potentially leading to a mass brawl.Leo gets 6 matches, tho it is said here that perhaps it was increased becauase he didn't say sorry. Like a politician, perhaps? They are always saying sorry.The issue is not about Bacuna, its about fairness. As with the fine for the crowd invasion and other incidents where villa get stamped on, the authorities and media seem to have it in for the clubWhich raises the wider issue, where the club lost its pride. We don't excuse what Leo did, but why there are comments about Leo and not the way the club has been treated over the years is a mystery. The world sees us as a failed institution, and that was so under Lerner. But its time to get our pride back, starting with questioning why we and our players get treated in ways that are out of order.
Quote from: trevor fisher on March 09, 2017, 11:04:53 AMwhat the FA has said to justify this is obscure, but pales into insignificance against the bans handed out to serious violence missed by the ref in the Man u - Bournmouth game. Mings has now had a 5 match ban for deliberately stamping on the head of the swede. Ibrahimovic has a three match ban for elbowing Mings, presumably in retaliation and leading to him being pushed to the ground and potentially leading to a mass brawl.Leo gets 6 matches, tho it is said here that perhaps it was increased becauase he didn't say sorry. Like a politician, perhaps? They are always saying sorry.The issue is not about Bacuna, its about fairness. As with the fine for the crowd invasion and other incidents where villa get stamped on, the authorities and media seem to have it in for the clubWhich raises the wider issue, where the club lost its pride. We don't excuse what Leo did, but why there are comments about Leo and not the way the club has been treated over the years is a mystery. The world sees us as a failed institution, and that was so under Lerner. But its time to get our pride back, starting with questioning why we and our players get treated in ways that are out of order.Nothing to do with lack of pride etc. The club knows how serious a crime it is for a player to physically touch a match official in an aggressive manner, and rightly so. He deserves his long ban and that's that.
Quote from: saunders_heroes on March 09, 2017, 12:20:22 PMQuote from: trevor fisher on March 09, 2017, 11:04:53 AMwhat the FA has said to justify this is obscure, but pales into insignificance against the bans handed out to serious violence missed by the ref in the Man u - Bournmouth game. Mings has now had a 5 match ban for deliberately stamping on the head of the swede. Ibrahimovic has a three match ban for elbowing Mings, presumably in retaliation and leading to him being pushed to the ground and potentially leading to a mass brawl.Leo gets 6 matches, tho it is said here that perhaps it was increased becauase he didn't say sorry. Like a politician, perhaps? They are always saying sorry.The issue is not about Bacuna, its about fairness. As with the fine for the crowd invasion and other incidents where villa get stamped on, the authorities and media seem to have it in for the clubWhich raises the wider issue, where the club lost its pride. We don't excuse what Leo did, but why there are comments about Leo and not the way the club has been treated over the years is a mystery. The world sees us as a failed institution, and that was so under Lerner. But its time to get our pride back, starting with questioning why we and our players get treated in ways that are out of order.Nothing to do with lack of pride etc. The club knows how serious a crime it is for a player to physically touch a match official in an aggressive manner, and rightly so. He deserves his long ban and that's that. Both post still miss the point that 6 matches for contact with an official has no precedence. Whether he deserves it or not is besides the point (and I find it strange that so many Villa fans seem happy that it's so long) if he deserves it then so do the multitudes of people who have commited similar offences since the respect campaign started. To pick a random player in the middle of a season to make an example of is ridiculous and the club should have appealed on those grounds rather than on whether he was guilty or not. Without precedence it just looks like they've decided that Villa and Bacuna are soft targets for them to make an example of without upsetting anyone in the press. Imagine if it was Rooney and the different reaction it would've received.
I can't help my dislike of you making me think your view is idiotic.
A rule which, we all know, will be abandoned the second that the offender is wearing a red shirt.
I can't help my dislike of Bacuna influencing whether I think the ban is fair or not.Maybe he has had that effect on the people at the FA.