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Mannight: Dunk received a red card because a Manchester United player pressured the referee at Ronnick's request

Mannight: Dunk received a red card because a Manchester United player pressured the referee at Ronnick's request

According to the Manchester Evening News, dunk received a red card in the Manchester United match against Brighton because of the pressure from Manchester United players on the referee according to Lonnick's request.

After Brighton defender Lewis Dunk overthrew Ilanga on Tuesday night, seven players— Ilanga, Ronaldo, B Fee, Sancho, Scott McTominay, Fred, Luke Shaw and Maguire surrounded referee Peter Banks. Before B Fee had been shown a yellow card by Banks, a disgruntled Ronaldo accidentally bumped into Dunk. When video assistant referee Jared Gillette suggested banks look at the VAR, Dunk may have already started walking toward the tunnel.

Mannight: Dunk received a red card because a Manchester United player pressured the referee at Ronnick's request

The FA accused Manchester United of violating FA Rule E20.1 on Wednesday: "Manchester United clubs failed to ensure that their players played in an orderly manner in the 53rd minute and the club had to respond by Monday. "At present, a newspaper has sealed the mirror image of The United players intimidating Andy Delso. In January 2000, Dwuso awarded Middlesbrough a penalty at Old Trafford, during which time the visiting team had not won a penalty at Old Trafford for 10 and a half years.

Roy Keane's veins seemed to burst, and Stam seemed to be about to bite Deuso's head off. Deuso pointed to the penalty spot as he approached the penalty area, then retreated far away until he reached the flag in the northwest corner. Keane admitted that his actions were wrong. Sir Alex Ferguson almost set a precedent for intimidating referees, but he called a summit to ask the players to stop behaving so uncontrollably. In deUso's turmoil, what was seriously overlooked was his wrong decision. The direction of the ball indicated that Stam had clearly touched the ball first when he slid to tackle Juninho, and the only way for United to overturn the decision was to challenge Delso. Juninho's penalty was eventually saved by Mark Bosnik.

Banks also made mistakes, and the gut reaction was that Elanga had a chance to score and Dunk's foul was deliberate. This is not a definitive decision and it is wise to use VAR because the VAR referee's conclusion was correct. You also can't blame Brighton manager Porter for suggesting it was a yellow card. Webster is nearby, and is already close to Ilanga. This is not a hot spot for condemning or condoning the behaviour of Manchester United's players. At the weekend, Scholes accused them of a reluctance to put in the effort, with Rangnick saying after a draw at Southampton that United needed to be "more annoying".

When Firmino scored a few seconds after Van Dijk's aerial showdown with De Gea, De Gea angrily rushed towards referee Craig Posen. Fred and Andreas Pereira are also on the edge of Posen, while Maguire, Luke Shaw and Lindelof are also nearby. De Gea was shown a yellow card. VAR looked back at Van Dijk's movements and thought it was a foul. Gary Neville commented at Anfield that he thought the penalty was too soft. If United meekly accept a 2-0-0 situation without raising objections, VAR will not be able to step in.

Obviously, VAR can be manipulated, and after three days of questioning the team's pursuits by their manager and club stars while being in a three-game winless state, the United players proved that they are not always a bunch of shrunken-headed turtles. Fans complained that Maguire did not subtly influence referees as his teammates, such as the temperament possessed by Liverpool captain Henderson. Solskjaer advised United players last year to be "more street smart", while Rooney said in his documentary: "I'm willing to cheat for the club to win games. "The current group of players has not strayed from that line, but the comparison with Keane and Stam is an improvement.

in Justin

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