Quote from: lenny on April 23, 2024, 11:44:07 AMQuote from: tyrone08 on April 23, 2024, 11:25:18 AMQuote from: Applesisapples on April 23, 2024, 10:57:24 AMQuote from: Milltown Row2 on April 22, 2024, 04:30:06 PMIs that a black card?Quote from: Applesisapples on April 22, 2024, 03:44:46 PMQuote from: Milltown Row2 on April 21, 2024, 05:15:26 PMTo be fair the BBC could not find why there was 1 black and 1 yellow appeared bizzarre, a big call that impacted on the game. Do you know why?Quote from: clarshack on April 21, 2024, 05:13:27 PMAnother example of Tyrone being refereed differently again. How can one be a yellow card and the other black?
Did you see the whole incident or just what we seen on the telly?
I only seen what the telly showed, as did most? My thinking is the the Tyrone man pulled him to the ground and what we seen was the grabbing each about on TV
In this case the black card should have been to the cavan player. You see Paudie on his hands and knees with the cavan player standingover him preventing him from getting up. Thats a black card for impending a player. Paudie then struggles to get up and when he does he drags him down.
Both were at it and both deserved a yellow.
You're literally making up the rules there.
To receive a black card GAA, a player must commit one of the following offences. Deliberately pull down an opponent. Intentionally trip an opponent with the foot, arm, hand, or leg. To deliberately interfere with a player after they have played the ball away.
Hampsey deliberately pulls down his opponent. This is one case where the referee has got his decision spot on to the letter of the law.
How is standing over a player stopping them from getting up not deliberately interfering with a player ? By stopping them or tripping them you are deliberately interfering with them.
It should have been 2 yellows in my opinion but if pulling a player down away from play is a black card then so should deliberately interfering with a player.