Manchester City's Patrick Vieira slams refereeing inconsistencies

The former Arsenal midfielder believes the suspensions to Vincent Kompany and Mario Balotelli were unfair and has warned officials "not to kill the passion of the game"

By Michael Lightfoot

Patrick Vieira, Manchester City (Getty Images)

Patrick Vieira, Manchester City's football development chief executive, has suggested that referees are conspiring against the club in a bid to deny them their first Premier League title.

The Frenchman pinpoints Vincent Kompany's four-game ban and Mario Balotelli's suspension for violent conduct and believes the pair of them were unlucky.

He was quoted as saying by the Daily Mirror: “It felt like that anything that City will do will be amplified and we get punished [more than] the other teams and the other players.

“I don’t want to think about it because I don’t want to say everyone is against City or anything like that.

“But when you look at the last few decisions, you are asking yourself if something is wrong here, if people don’t want us to win the league.”

Vieira also singled out examples of players from other clubs as evidence that City are being hard done by, with incidents involving Chelsea's Frank Lampard, Stoke striker Peter Crouch and West Brom's Jonas Olsson going unpunished after being looked at with video evidence after the matches.

He continued: “Lampard’s tackle looked dangerous compared to Vincent’s. Crouch, when he put his finger in the eye of another player, looked bad as well.

“We try our best to win the league, we accept our punishment. But when you look what is happening to the other ones, that makes us as a football club really frustrated.

“It seems like if you have one referee you get one decision but if you have a different referee the decision may also be different.

“It’s difficult to understand some decisions compared to the decisions we had. I think this is what brings the confusion. The confusion is dangerous for our game.

“Players are saying that they don’t know what the rules mean and if they are likely to be sent off or not.

“Confusion is really dangerous, especially for the referee and the refereeing body. I believe that they’re making the referees job more and more difficult.

“A good referee is someone who referees with his personality and with common sense, to make the decision he thinks is right at the moment, not because he’s afraid of the consequences.”

Vieira is becoming frustrated at refereeing inconsistencies in the game, claiming players "cannot tackle anymore" in the Premier League.

“Mario didn’t get sent off, but when you look at the position of the referee you say ‘how couldn’t he see it?’," he added.

“Of course there’s going to be a debate, but he made his own decision [at the time] which he thought was right or wrong. I think this is the danger of not letting the referee just be a referee.

“With Vinnie my feeling was that when he went for the tackle he went for the ball. For me, it wasn’t a foul. I was quite surprised that the referee gave a foul.

“I was more surprised that he came out with a red card. Ten years ago the game was much more physical than it is now.

“Tackles like that were happening when I was playing at Arsenal. If that was a red card there would have been a sending off in every game I played for Arsenal.

“It was one of the harshest decisions I’ve ever seen in the last few months.

“England is the only country in the world where fans in the stadium applaud the striker who has scored but also the defender who wins the ball with a tackle.

“You will not get that anywhere else in the world. Now it looks like you can’t tackle any more. The refereeing body has to be really careful to not kill the passion of the game.”

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