Jump to content

Massadio Haïdara


Optimistic Nut

Recommended Posts

Paul Parker on Eurosport...

 

Callum McManaman's tackle on Massadio Haidara was probably the worst tackle I have witnessed in the game. And I've seen a few bad ones being a defender. I could not believe what I was watching on Sunday evening.

 

Was it malicious? Did he mean it? Only he can tell us. If he is honest enough, he might just come out say what was in his head. It was a thuggish and cowardly act.

 

What he is guilty of is absolutely awful, and it seems a joke that he is going to get away game's authorities.

 

You can't even say it was over the top. It went beyond over the top. It is all well and good saying he clipped a piece of the ball, but it was the damage and the force of the challenge that is the problem.

 

The lad might have serious ligament damage around his knee area. That is more serious than a break sometimes because players just can't get over it.

 

They can't do the same things and can be drastically affected by it. It changes your running style and walking style. It then affects other muscles and tendons. In theory, it could be a huge problem for the Newcastle lad in years to come.

 

McManaman's tackle is the worst kind of challenge you could see. I'm really surprised that the Wigan chairman Dave Whelan came out and said what he said. Sometimes it is better not to say anything.

 

The Wigan manager Roberto Martinez has kept quiet, but Whelan has said too much. There is no defence for what McManaman did and all Whelan has done is put himself and his club in a bad light.

 

Some are saying he was immature, that it was his full Premier League debut etc. Well, I've seen a lot of debuts, but I haven't seen a challenge like that.

 

If that was a tackle in a match on a public park on a Sunday morning, you would see the biggest fight and brawl of your life between players. If somebody put a challenge in like that on somebody's team-mate in an amateur match, there would have been a war.

 

McManaman would also have had to come off the pitch a lot sooner than he did in an amateur match because somebody would have tried to hurt him.

 

You can't condone a tackle like that at any level of football. You can't condone the Newcastle assistant manager John Carver for approaching McManaman at half-time, but you can understand his behaviour.

 

Haidara had just come on as a substitute and is trying to make a name for himself in a much improved Newcastle side. 13 minutes later he has to be carried off by something that is more like GBH than a tackle.

 

I heard today he made a horror tackle against Manchester City under-21s. That suggests there is history/

 

The manager said he is wanting to apologise, but I'd be very surprised if Haidara is interested in an apology.

 

If he is lying there in a hospital bed with his leg up, the last thing he wants is to see that tackle again. I know I don't want to watch it again. I got a chill through my body when it went in, because I have had knee problems.

 

Haidara didn't expect the sole of a size eight boot coming at him with brute force on his standing leg. The referee Mark Halsey and the linesmen must also be reprimanded for their performance.

 

Like McManaman, he needs a lengthy period out of the game to reflect and think about where he is going wrong, but it now looks like nothing is going to happen.

 

Fucking bang on.

 

:thup:  Always liked Parker as a player and a person and he's summed up the cowardly tackle and aftermath perfectly there.

He's a nice lad, i got his autograph outside Loftus Road when he played against us for QPR and looked like he'd got the tube to the ground as he'd walked from the general direction of White City.
Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest ObiChrisKenobi

The pic on SSN now shows the ball at the players feet whilst the thug's foot is planted on Haidara's knee. There is no way that this can be construed as 'getting the ball clean as a whistle" as the ball has gone nowhere.

 

McManaman does clip the ball, but it's the force through the ball and into the player that's the issue. It's definition of excessive force. His leading leg is above and over the ball (he clips the top of it), and is at knee height. His body is leaning back at an angle, so he's lunging in. His trailing leg comes through too, so it's a full force challenge with no way of stopping (save smashing into a player). He even bounces off of Haidara such is the impact and force, so Haidara absorbs it all since both of his legs are planted into the ground. It's horrible.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Surely this gives us basis for a legal complaint then?

 

Absolutely. FA have boxed themselves in a corner with their poorly written statement, former referees, players, pundits and even a former FA chief criticising them and pointing out that they could easily have punished McManaman.

Link to post
Share on other sites

not sure if giggs...

 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2296225/Teenager-charged-sending-Twitter-death-threat-Wigan-Athletics-Callum-McManaman-horror-tackle-Newcastle-Uniteds-Massadio-Haidara.html

 

A teenager has been arrested for sending Callum McManaman a death threat as the Wigan winger received a tirade of Twitter abuse after his horror challenge on Newcastle's Massadio Haidara.

 

The 17-year-old, from Ashington in Northumberland, was fined for sending a tweet reading: 'cant wait till you come to st james' #GonnaDie #GetYourFuneralPlannedKid.'

 

McManaman, 21, escaped punishment from the Football Association for the tackle yesterday - a verdict that was met with derision across the football world - but he was bombarded with Twitter abuse.

 

Haidara was carried off on a stretcher as a result of the tackle during Wigan's 2-1 win over Newcastle at the DW Stadium on Sunday.

 

Referee Mark Halsey was unsighted and play continued but because assistant Matthew Wilkes saw the incident and didn't act, the FA could not issue retrospective punishment.

 

However, Newcastle assistant manager John Carver and Wigan coach Graham Barrow were charged with misconduct over a bust-up as the sides went in for half-time.

 

A Northumbria police spokesman said: 'We received a third party report of a malicious communication on Twitter.

 

'As a result, a 17-year-old boy from Ashington was arrested on suspicion of producing malicious content.

 

'He was handed a fixed penalty notice.'

 

A Wigan Athletic spokesman added: 'We’ve been made aware of some unsavoury comments made on Twitter.

 

'We understand that reports were made to the police and they have dealt with the matter.

 

'No one wants to see this. Everyone’s focus should be on the welfare of the Newcastle player.'

 

The decision not to suspend McManaman means he is free to play in Wigan's FA Cup semi-final with Millwall at Wembley on April 13.

 

 

 

Imagine if the police had said 'we saw the tweet, but not the full extent of it therefore we let him off scot free'

Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest neesy111

Surely this gives us basis for a legal complaint then?

 

Absolutely. FA have boxed themselves in a corner with their poorly written statement, former referees, players, pundits and even a former FA chief criticising them and pointing out that they could easily have punished McManaman.

 

I was thinking this last night, FA shot themselves in the foot with that statement.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Another spot on article from Eurosport's Early Doors

 

With a Football Association as weak as this, is it any wonder super-rich England players treat national team calls with casual interest?

 

Rio Ferdinand’s withdrawal from the England squad upset many supporters, but there were valid medical reasons behind his absence, not to mention a concern about Roy Hodgson’s man-management; if there was ever a time to consult with a player or his club, now was that time.

 

Hodgson may have his own reasons for this modus operandi – perhaps he was looking to force Rio’s hand, to put the matter to bed – but the concern should really be about players who, with no fitness worries of note, have made themselves ‘unavailable for selection’ due to matters of simple ego.

 

Micah Richards and Paul Robinson are key recent offenders, with Michael Carrick and Jamie Carragher having done so and repented at various times.

 

But as the FA shows an almost pathological lack of backbone on a repeated basis, who can blame self-interested multi-millionaires for viewing this ramshackle organisation with nonchalant disdain?

 

One of this week’s water-cooler topics shines a light on the lack of power and control the FA has over its charges.

 

Hamstrung by its own rules, English football’s governing body says it cannot punish Wigan’s Callum McManaman for inflicting a possibly career-ending challenge on poor Massadio Haidara, a youngster who has not had the time in the professional game to rack up enough cash should his second Newcastle appearance be his last.

 

The FA’s statutes on discipline state that a player cannot be punished retrospectively if an official – any official, not just the referee – has missed an incident.

 

So while Mark Halsey’s view of the offending challenge was obscured by Mapou Yanga-Mbiwa, his assistant did see the horrific challenge yet – inexplicably – deemed it unworthy of further action.

 

The FA is so desperate to protect its employees that it will not countenance a challenge to match officials’ decision-making, even if it is clearly flawed or clouded by incompetence.

 

The thing is, the FA’s argument may technically be correct by its own terms, but it is also flawed.

 

This insistence that an offence cannot be punished if seen by an official has its root in FIFA disciplinary statute 77(a), which states ‘The Disciplinary Committee is responsible for sanctioning serious infringements which have escaped the match officials’ attention’.

 

This is all very well and good, but immediately after 77(a) comes – shock, horror – 77(b) which allows for ‘rectifying obvious errors in the referee’s disciplinary decisions’.

 

The FA would be well within its rights to overturn assistant referee Matthew Wilkes’s in-play decision to keep his flag by his side when McManaman launched into his horrendous knee-high challenge on Haidara.

 

But the FA – for all its bleating – is not remotely interested in upholding FIFA statutes, but merely “protecting the primacy” of its officials.

 

That line is given as a quote, because it is a quote – from FA chairman David Bernstein.

 

In 2011 Bernstein used that term while explaining the FA’s decision not to punish Wayne Rooney for elbowing Wigan’s James McCarthy during a Premier League match almost exactly two years ago.

 

In his explanation, Bernstein conceded that an official’s view of an incident could indeed be overturned in “exceptional circumstances” – as allowed by FIFA’s aforementioned law 77(b). But the FA had decided that Rooney’s action did not constitute “exceptional circumstances”, which had been cited when Ben Thatcher was retrospectively punished for his potentially lethal challenge on Pedro Mendes in 2006.

 

Clearly the FA also does not consider McManaman’s horror tackle “exceptional” enough to level a charge that would threaten the “primacy” of a linesman.

 

Furthermore, the wording of law 77(b) allows for “obvious error”; Wilkes’s failure to call McManaman’s lunge a foul is as clear and obvious an error as one can see.

 

It is rare that Sepp Blatter is praised on these pages, but in the aftermath of the Rooney incident he specifically advised the FA that, if desired, it could retrospectively charge a player if the referee or his assistant saw but misinterpreted a foul or instance of violent conduct.

 

That there is precedent with the Thatcher incident, and that the FA is rightly willing to exceed precedent for instances of discriminatory behaviour, further weakens the argument that the FA cannot punish McManaman – the reality is that the FA will not punish him.

 

Indeed, how would the FA react if a referee failed to dismiss a player for racially or homphobically abusing an opponent, despite having heard the insult? Would it continue to back its man? You have to say not, and with good reason.

 

With the exception of Wigan, who have acted disgracefully in collectively backing McManaman, absurdly claiming it was a fair challenge, the FA is on its own here.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest ObiChrisKenobi

The pic on SSN now shows the ball at the players feet whilst the thug's foot is planted on Haidara's knee. There is no way that this can be construed as 'getting the ball clean as a whistle" as the ball has gone nowhere.

 

McManaman does clip the ball, but it's the force through the ball and into the player that's the issue. It's definition of excessive force. His leading leg is above and over the ball (he clips the top of it), and is at knee height. His body is leaning back at an angle, so he's lunging in. His trailing leg comes through too, so it's a full force challenge with no way of stopping (save smashing into a player). He even bounces off of Haidara such is the impact and force, so Haidara absorbs it all since both of his legs are planted into the ground. It's horrible.

 

Getting the ball is a total irrelevance. I could get the ball an absolutely maim someone if I wanted to

 

That was the point - even though he clips the ball it's excessive force.

Link to post
Share on other sites

As soon as he wasn't sent off any restrospective action taken again the scumbag mean't actually nothing to NUFC.

 

Who seriously gives a f*** if he got a three match ban - how does that help NUFC? It doesn't.

 

We need to focus anger on the match officials. They f***ed up. They should be punished but yet again it now means nothing to NUFC. Even if Halsey is relegated to doing s*** 2nd division match's for a month or two - SO f***.

 

The moment passed when he wasn't sent off.

 

Are you being deliberately contrary? I think the general idea is that he needs to be punished for potentially wrecking someones career. Whether it gets us three points back is irrelevant. You're post is ridiculous, in fact all your posts in this thread have.

 

So you want revenge on the scouse scum?

 

Thats fine, but, like I suggest, it is of no benefit whatsoever to NUFC if any retrospective punishment was enforced.

 

The FA have made cunts of themselves. If anything positive comes out of this is that maybe a shitstorm that will send the wind of change through the FA.

 

Considering bans would likely lead to a fairer league and less likelihood of such events recurring, would it benefit NUFC to play in a league that's safer for the players?

 

Pointless this isn't it.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest reefatoon

I must say, I am getting lots of enjoyment at how bad Wigan are coming out of all this.  Serves the shit little club right.

Link to post
Share on other sites

"Tackles like that happen every single day, in every single league, at least 60/70 times. At least."

 

Facts.

 

In England alone, with 4 professional divisions there must be 240-280 of such incidents...  EVERY SINGLE DAY.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Everything Barnes has said and done since leaving Liverpool has been a total disaster. Don't know why anyone gives him the time of day, especially after backing Suarez with what he went through as an England player.

 

 

Link to post
Share on other sites

Guest reefatoon

The bellend is clueless.  He probably didn't have a clue what to say, so started doing his 1990 world cup rap. The "they always hit you and hurt you, defending on time" line, didn't go down to well though.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Everything Barnes has said and done since leaving Liverpool has been a total disaster. Don't know why anyone gives him the time of day, especially after backing Suarez with what he went through as an England player.

 

 

 

I can't work out if he's a massive douche or the best WUM ever. Either way I'm surprised Talksport don't give him more time.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...