Premier League red card rules explained as William Saliba and Mohammed Kudus face different bans

Saturday was a busy day for match officials in the Premier League. In seven top flight matches there were no fewer than five red cards dished out.

The big London derby between Tottenham Hotspur and West Ham United at lunchtime set the tone, with Mohammed Kudus seeing red late on in the contest. The Ghanaian was dismissed after hitting two Spurs players in the face in an on-field melee after he had fouled Micky van de Ven and then kicked him while he was on the floor.

 

There then followed a spate of red cards. There were two in the game between Fulham and Aston Villa, as well as one in the Southampton vs Leicester City clash.

In the evening kick-off, Arsenal were then reduced to ten men for the third time this season – William Saliba receiving his marching orders against Bournemouth for a pull back on Evanilson after just 30 minutes. The Gunners would go on to lose for the first time this season – beaten 2-0 by the Cherries.

Bournemouth 2-0 Arsenal: Ryan Christie and Justin Kluivert's second-half  goals see Cherries secure sweet victory - as William Saliba is sent off for  10-man Gunners who miss chance to go top of

Both the Hammers and the Gunners will lose influential players now to suspension, but the duo will be missing for a differing number of games, despite both seeing red. That is because there are different rules based on the reason for your red card.

Saliba only faces a one-match ban – although that is bad enough with Arsenal’s next game against Premier League title rivals Liveprool next weekend. Kudus, meanwhile, will be suspended for three matches.

Red card offences and the bans

Serious Foul Play – 3 match ban

Violent Conduct – further defined as: head to head, elbowing, kicking, stamping, striking, biting, other unspecified behaviour – 3 match ban

Spitting – 6 match ban

Denying the opposing team a goal or an obvious goalscoring opportunity by deliberately handling the ball – 1 match ban

Denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity to an opponent moving towards the player’s goal by an offence punishable by a free-kick or a penalty kick – 1 match ban

Use of offensive, insulting or abusive language – 2 match ban

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*