Monday, April 18, 2011

Mario Balotelli vs Rio Ferdinand - FA... VIDEO



Mario Balotelli vs Rio Ferdinand - FA Cup Semi -... by UploaderKingHD

The Football Association will study Mike Dean's referee's report on Monday before deciding whether to take disciplinary action against players from Manchester United and Manchester City, following the ugly scenes after Saturday's FA Cup semi-final at Wembley.

Some United players were incensed after Mario Balotelli approached rival supporters while tugging at the City badge on his shirt; his team-mates had gathered towards the other end of the pitch. Anderson and Rio Ferdinand reacted furiously and attempted to shove the Italian striker away from the sidelines, prompting the City coach, David Platt, and manager, Roberto Mancini, to intervene. Ferdinand was further angered when Balotelli winked at him; the United defender then confronted Platt, asking him to "control his players".

Ferdinand, whose wife Rebecca gave birth to their third child over the weekend, apologised for his part in the ugly scenes via his Twitter account on Sunday though he was still critical of Balotelli's conduct. "If you score a goal and give a bit to opposing fans I kind of accept that, but at the final whistle [you should] go to your own fans and enjoy it, not opposing fans," the centre-half wrote. "If I offended anyone I apologise. Emotions were obviously running high."

"He [Balotelli] was showing his badge to our fans," said Nani. "Anderson just took him out from in front of our fans. Rio was very angry because it is not fair, it was very disrespectful to do that in front of the fans. We were not happy with that."

As the incident took place on the pitch, albeit after the final whistle, the FA's response will lean heavily upon the observations of Dean. The referee could call the confrontation an extraordinary incident or claim not to have witnessed it – both scenarios could invite the FA to investigate. Platt sought Ferdinand out by the team buses after the game and the pair spoke for three or four minutes, the defender reiterating that the coaching staff should have controlled Balotelli. Platt and Ferdinand left the national stadium after shaking hands.

Recently, the FA chose to punish Wayne Rooney retrospectively, after he swore into a television camera on completing a hat-trick against West Ham. The United striker's two-game ban has been served and he will return for Tuesday's trip to Newcastle.

Paul Scholes will miss United's next three matches, including a potentially critical trip to second-placed Arsenal on 1 May, following his dismissal on Saturday. The midfielder's high, studs-up challenge on Pablo Zabaleta, 19 minutes from time, will prompt a three-match ban for violent conduct that will rule the 36-year-old out of games against Newcastle, Everton and Arsenal. Scholes, who has been sent off 10 times in his career, had recently returned from a two-match ban that was earned after he collected 10 yellow cards.

"It was as really bad tackle, very high, over the knee," said Zabaleta. "If it had been any lower my knee would probably be 'gone'. I have pain in my quad, but it was a really bad challenge."

United's chances of emulating their treble of 1999 have been dashed but they can console themselves that they still have a healthy lead at the top of the Premier League and a European Cup semi-final against Schalke to come.

"We are very disappointed but we are experienced enough to forget this game and think about the games coming up," said Nani. "The other trophies we are competing for are more important than this one. If we'd had to sacrifice one trophy from the three this would have been the one.

"We would prefer to win the Champions League and the Premier League. But we must still recover quickly because we have Newcastle on Tuesday and have lots of games coming up after that. We must be ready for them. It's very important we win the next game."