#Letakan iklan disini
Football Dec 07, 2025

Moises Caicedo red card: Was Enzo Maresca right to complain about lack of Premier league referee consistency - The Whistle Blower

👤
By Admin
Sports Journalist
Moises Caicedo red card: Was Enzo Maresca right to complain about lack of Premier league referee consistency - The Whistle Blower

Enzo Maresca has criticised a lack of consistency in Premier League refereeing decisions, after Moses Caicedo was sent off against Arsenal on Sunday.

That's because Rodrigo Bentancur was given only a yellow card for a foul on Reece James last month - a challenge the Chelsea boss says "is exactly the same foul."

Maresca accepted that Caicedo deserved a red card for his foul on Mikel Merino at Stamford Bridge, but he said he could not understand why Bentancur hadn't also seen red a month before.

"Only thing I struggle to understand is the different way to judge," Maresca told SportNews after the game. "Because what about Bentancur against Reece [James]? It is exactly the same foul for me.

"For me, tonight it was a red card [for Caicedo], and also that one. Why is one a red card, one is not a red card? This difference you sometimes struggle to understand."

There are no doubt similarities between the two fouls by Bentancur and Caicedo, but there are also differences, which the referee's body PGMOL would no doubt point to by way of explanation.

Before analysing the two challenges in detail, the first thing to highlight is that a red card for serious foul play is based around a subjective opinion. It is not a factual refereeing decision like offside, or whether the ball has crossed the goal line.

It is an assessment by the on-field referee (and by the VAR) as to whether the foul was reckless (which results in a yellow card being awarded) or dangerous (when a red card is issued).

There are several criteria the referee will use to assess the severity of a foul, including - but not limited to:

The FA rule, as it relates to red cards for serious foul play, says: "A tackle or challenge that endangers the safety of an opponent or uses excessive force or brutality must be sanctioned as serious foul play. Any player who lunges at an opponent in challenging for the ball from the front, from the side or from behind using one or both legs, with excessive force or endangers the safety of an opponent is guilty of serious foul play."

And serious foul play = red card.

Now let's look at where the two challenges were similar; both players missed the ball. Bentancur's challenge on James made contact with his ankle with a downward motion, just as Caicedo's foul on Merino did.

Bentancur's tackle was definitely studs-first, as was Caicedo's. But then you have to question whether each challenge had the same level of force, and this is where the referees might be justified in seeing a difference between the two.

Crucially, Caicedo did a very small jump immediately before he made contact with Merino's ankle. For a split second, both feet were off the ground and he was not in control of the challenge.

That can rightly be interpreted by the referee and VAR as incurring more force than Bentancur's challenge on James, when the Tottenham man had one foot on the ground at all times. And it seems as though Caicedo made contact with the leg fractionally higher than Bentancur did.

As a result of those two factors, it could be argued that Caicedo's challenge was more "dangerous" to the opponent, and therefore more worthy of a red card.

But in truth, the differences between the two fouls are marginal, and yet Caicedo saw red and Bentancur saw yellow.

The biggest area of issue is actually the question of why the VAR intervened in one case (Caicedo) but not with the other (Bentancur).

The referee's chief Howard Webb stresses to all his officials that the VAR's job is not to re-referee the game, and priority should be given to the on-field decision unless there is a "clear and obvious error."

"It looks nasty, but initially the referee makes the decision to give him a yellow card so it is slightly re-refereeing it," said Daniel Sturridge on the SportNews coverage of Chelsea v Arsenal.

"He's gone with the VAR 'help' but I think if you look at it in high speed, it doesn't look that bad a tackle."

Both challenges were initially given as yellow cards on the pitch, but John Brookes on VAR decided to intervene at Stamford Bridge because he felt it was a clear and obvious error to give Caicedo a yellow, whereas Craig Pawson, VAR in the Tottenham vs Chelsea game, decided not to get involved, and Bentancur's yellow stuck.

Again, it is a subjective view from the VAR about whether he or she feels there has been a clear and obvious error, and they would use exactly the same assessment criteria for when the original decision was made. There has to be a tipping point where the VAR gets involved, and this is again subjective.

Maresca clearly has a case, but such apparent inconsistencies are inevitable under the rules when it comes to subjective refereeing decisions.

They are based on judgements, on the opinion of the referee and the VAR on any given day, taking into account the individual circumstances of an individual challenge and, crucially, no foul can ever be exactly the same.

Tags:

football news id:13477860

Share this article

Related Posts

Chelsea's Mykhailo Mudryk could restart career with loan move if he avoids ban - Paper talk and football transfer gossip

Chelsea's Mykhailo Mudryk could restart career with loan move if he avoids ban - Paper talk and football transfer gossip

The top stories and transfer rumours from Tuesday's newspapers...PREMIER LEAGUEChelsea outcast Mykhailo Mudryk could yet restart his career on loan aw...

Derek McInnes: Lawrence Shankland, Cammy Devlin return can set up 'special' end to season for title-chasing Hearts

Derek McInnes: Lawrence Shankland, Cammy Devlin return can set up 'special' end to season for title-chasing Hearts

Derek McInnes believes the return of Cammy Devlin and Lawrence Shankland can set Hearts on course for "a special end to the season".The Jambos are two...

England 0-1 Japan: Kaoru Mitoma nets deserved winner as experimental Three Lions fail to fire again

England 0-1 Japan: Kaoru Mitoma nets deserved winner as experimental Three Lions fail to fire again

England's World Cup hopefuls did little to convince Thomas Tuchel of their worth when he names his squad in barely two months' time as another experim...

Manchester United 3-1 Aston Villa: Bruno Fernandes masterclass helps Michael Carrick's side take control of Champions League qualification race

Manchester United 3-1 Aston Villa: Bruno Fernandes masterclass helps Michael Carrick's side take control of Champions League qualification race

Manchester United took control of the race for Champions League qualification after beating Aston Villa 3-1 at Old Trafford to open up a three-point b...

World Cup 2026 fixture schedule and UK kick-off times: Day-by-day breakdown of all 104 matches including England, Scotland

World Cup 2026 fixture schedule and UK kick-off times: Day-by-day breakdown of all 104 matches including England, Scotland

With all 48 teams now qualified for the 2026 World Cup, here's your day-by-day breakdown of the 37-day tournament, which kicks off in Mexico on June 1...

Max Dowman: Behind the scenes of Arsenal's teenage sensation and the key figures behind his rise

Max Dowman: Behind the scenes of Arsenal's teenage sensation and the key figures behind his rise

It is a moment that will go down in Arsenal folklore. As Mikel Arteta said: "For many years, we will remember that we were at the Emirates that night...