Andybwfc Posted December 8, 2005 Posted December 8, 2005 From the Telegraph!.....What the fcuk!!! Sepp Blatter, the president of Fifa, the world ruling body, has told Uefa they can take disciplinary action against Michael Essien for the Chelsea midfielder's shocking foul on Liverpool's Dietmar Hamann. Essien's knee-high challenge was missed by German referee Herbert Fandel but Blatter confirmed that under the rules of the game the European organisation, Uefa, could use video evidence to bring charges against the Chelsea player. Blatter told a news conference in Leipzig: "In 1994 the Fifa executive committee took a decision that the disciplinary committee can use television evidence in the case of infractions against the laws of the game that have not been identified by the referee. "As this happened in a Champions League game it is up to Uefa to decide whether to review video evidence." In October, Essien escaped further disciplinary action following a dangerous tackle on Bolton defender Tal Ben Haim, despite referee Rob Styles wanting to upgrade the yellow card he awarded to red after reviewing television footage. The Football Association consulted Fifa and were told the decision could not be reversed. Blatter appeared to contradict that yesterday by saying: "If it was a blatant red card and only a yellow card was given the disciplinary body can transfer it", but Fifa communications director Markus Siegler later clarified the rules. Siegler said: "You cannot upgrade or downgrade one card to another but you can take action if the referee has not seen an incident." Uefa are waiting for reports from referee Frandel and match delegate Indrek Kannik of Spain before deciding whether to take action.
Casino Posted December 8, 2005 Posted December 8, 2005 about 2 hours ago talkshite reported essien had been charged and no 2 bob charge either
ZiggyStardust Posted December 8, 2005 Posted December 8, 2005 In October, Essien escaped further disciplinary action following a dangerous tackle on Bolton defender Tal Ben Haim, despite referee Rob Styles wanting to upgrade the yellow card he awarded to red after reviewing television footage. The Football Association consulted Fifa and were told the decision could not be reversed. Blatter appeared to contradict that yesterday by saying: "If it was a blatant red card and only a yellow card was given the disciplinary body can transfer it", but Fifa communications director Markus Siegler later clarified the rules. Siegler said: "You cannot upgrade or downgrade one card to another but you can take action if the referee has not seen an incident." Uefa are waiting for reports from referee Frandel and match delegate Indrek Kannik of Spain before deciding whether to take action. fcuking tossers, the same day as Essien was not allowed to be charged for the incident against us, Blackburn defender had his red card reduced to yellow, with FIFA's backing. FIFA should be on a charge of bringing the game into disrepute.
Andybwfc Posted December 8, 2005 Author Posted December 8, 2005 ....more from the Guardian.... The Fifa president Sepp Blatter yesterday cleared Uefa to take retrospective action against Michael Essien for his dangerous over-the-top tackle on Liverpool's Dietmar Hamann. Speaking after the European governing body had declared that it would not use video evidence to take action against the Chelsea player, who did not receive a card for the violent lunge, Blatter said governing bodies had a responsibility to take action in such cases. "Since the 1994 World Cup the Fifa executive committee has said that TV evidence can be used in the case of fouls which have not been identified by the referee or identified wrongly," Blatter said. "As this was a Champions League match it must be handled by Uefa." Essien's infringement on Tuesday night came two months after a similar tackle on Bolton's Tal Ben Haim was punished with only a yellow card. The Football Association said it could not upgrade the penalty to a red, citing Fifa statutes, but yesterday Blatter appeared to overrule that judgment. "If [a foul] was a blatant red card and only a yellow was awarded then the disciplinary body can intervene and make the yellow into a red card," he said. Blatter was not alone in his negative comments. "Disgrace" and "Ess Clubbed" were two of the more hysterical headlines the back pages employed across pictures of the Chelsea midfielder's "reducer". "It was the worst tackle I have experienced in my career; I really feared I might have broken my leg," said Hamann. Essien, 23 last Saturday, can seldom have encountered such negative publicity. Before his ??24.4m move to Stamford Bridge from Lyon last summer he enjoyed adulation and admiration in almost equal measure. Regarded by fans as the beating heart of the side that scooped successive titles in 2004 and 2005, he also landed the player-of-the-year ward in France's Championnat. But if he is to follow that up with this season's Premiership laurels he will probably have to do without the votes of Hamann and Ben Haim. "Essien is a great player and a fair player," the Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho said after the Ben Haim incident. "He has an incredible record on disciplinary issues. He is a very clean player." Indeed, Essien did not come to England with a reputation for thuggishness. "At Lyon he sometimes had this game that was hard and he could do big fouls," said L'Equipe's editor-in-chief Jean-Michel Rouet. "He was always aggressive and had a hard-man image but I am sure that in absolutely no case he would set out to hurt an opponent. He takes risks on the pitch but he is not the nasty type." None the less, Essien's disciplinary record last season stuck out like Hamann's sore shin. Lyon won France's fair play league despite, not because of him. In total the French champions picked up one red card and 54 yellow cards. Fourteen of those cautions belonged to Essien and his was the sole dismissal. He picked up another red card, ironically, in the pre-season Peace Cup. "He has a double personality. He's very timid, very reserved and very nice; sometimes he just doesn't know his own strength," said Rouet. None the less, Essien often acted as his team's lightning conductor. In 37 matches, 25 yellow cards were distributed for fouls against him. "He was the most fouled against, more than the attackers. But he knows he's got a physical game himself and he takes what he dishes out," Rouet added. Something he will have found harder to swallow is the media criticism. At his first press conference in England he mumbled his words so softly that even the microphones could not pick them up. Though disguised on the pitch, timidity is his most recognisable trait; indeed he is a self-confessed mummy's boy. "She is the person I listen to the most," Essien has said. "She keeps advising me to remain modest, to respect everyone and not to do anything silly. I do not like being at the centre of things; I prefer listening to being heard. I would rather look than be seen. I am a real shy one; everyone says so and I can't do a thing about it."
Guest Steeevo Posted December 9, 2005 Posted December 9, 2005 Im pretty sure the reason uefa can look at the tackle on Hamman is because the ref didn't see it, against us the ref did see it and only thought was worth a yellow. Even though later when he saw it again he said he should have sent him off, he couldnt change it from a yellow. Its bang out of order
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