Empire of the Kop
·9. Januar 2025
Empire of the Kop
·9. Januar 2025
Lucas Bergvall scored Tottenham’s match-winning goal against Liverpool in the first leg of their Carabao Cup semi-final on Wednesday night, but he could count himself lucky to have still been on the pitch at the time.
The 18-year-old was already on a yellow card when he scythed down Kostas Tsimikas in the closing minutes in north London, but Stuart Attwell neglected to book him a second time, a crucial oversight as the teenager swiftly conjured up the game’s decisive moment.
Virgil van Dijk was insistent that the Spurs youngster should’ve been sent off before scoring the winner, and even Ange Postecoglou expressed sympathy for his opposite number Arne Slot in his post-match press duties.
Liverpool fans are rightly fuming over the matter, and an impartial journalist has observed that the ire of Kopites is justified.
ESPN FC editor Dale Johnson – who regularly offers commentary and insight on contentious refereeing/VAR decisions – posted a thread on X in which he comprehensively explained by Attwell was wrong to let Bergvall off the hook for his challenge on Tsimikas.
(Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images)
The main takeaways from the journalist’s analysis were:
Johnson’s detailed explanation highlights that Attwell made an error by not deeming Bergvall’s challenge on Tsimikas to have been reckless – how he intepreted it as not even a foul (i.e. by not playing advantage) seems baffling.
When we routinely see yellow cards being doled out for miniscule fouls or harmless offences such as mild dissent, it boggles the mind as to how incidents like this can go without sanction. We don’t want to see players being dismissed for a second booking when one isn’t warranted, but in this instance it very much was.
The ESPN journalist has offered an impartial and comprehensive analysis as to why the referee got it wrong, and it’s one that PGMOL chief Howard Webb would be wise to take note of when next briefing the officials under his jurisdiction.
Bergvall is a hugely talented young player with a high ceiling, and Tottenham’s overall performance merited a result as they punished a substandard display from Liverpool, but the manner in which the winning goal came about is definitely hard to swallow.
Alas, the Reds can’t change history and will simply need to put things right in the second leg next month, as well as getting their season back on track after two poor results to begin the calendar year.