Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Leicester’s calamity referee drops down for QPR’s Burnley trip - Referee
Tuesday, 26th Apr 2016 20:50 by Clive Whittingham

Fresh from his eccentric handling of Leicester v West Ham, Jon Moss returns to the middle for QPR’s trip to Burnley on Monday.

Referee >>> Jon Moss (West Yorkshire), took charge of QPR’s 2-0 home win against Burnley earlier this season, and a 1-1 draw with Everton here in 2012.

Assistants >>> Andrew Halliday (North Yorkshire) and Eddie Smart (West Midlands) — Smart was also on the line for Moss’ last QPR appointment against Everton at Loftrus Road in March last year.

Fourth Official >>> Geoff Eltringham (Tyne and Wear)

Previously

QPR 1 Everton 2, Sunday March 22, 2015, Premier League

Everton subsequently took the lead but Rangers continued to press, led by Barton who looked like a man with a point to prove after a three match suspension and turned in his best performance of the season. Austin failed to connect with a Junior Hoilett cross when he should have done, Howard claimed another centre almost off the forehead of Zamora, then the veteran target man missed what looked like a sitter when he glanced rather than planted a header from his partner's cross. Everton resorted to blatant time-wasting tactics long before the end, watched passively by referee Jon Moss.

Moss later booked Yun when a free kick would have sufficed, and Hoilett who was late on Lennon.

Instead Rangers went long far too often - big long punts down the centre of the field towards Bobby Zamora. Jagielka, for the most part, needn't have changed out of his club suit. He just stood and headed the ball straight back from whence it came. On the one occasion Zamora did find some space and joy, he thrashed at a chance and blazed it into the Loft End — Everton too busy appealing that Karl Henry had committed a foul in back play to bother defending. Moss waved them away, the goal would have stood, had QPR possessed somebody capable of scoring it.

QPR: Green 6; Isla 6, Caulker 6, Onuoha 6, Yun 6; Phillips 6, Barton 8, Sandro 5 (Henry 71, 6), Hoilett 6 (Vargas 60, 5); Zamora 5 (Taarabt 82, -), Austin 6

Subs not used: McCarthy, Hill, Ferdinand, Kranjcar

Goals: Vargas 64 (assisted Barton/Austin)

Bookings: Hoilett 39 (foul), Yun 56 (foul)

Everton: Howard 6; Coleman 6, Stones 7, Jagielka 7, Baines 6; Lennon 6, McCarthy 6, Gibson 6, Osman 6; Kone 6 (Naismith 79, 6), Lukaku 6 (Barkley 67, 5)

Subs not used: Robles, Besic, Browning, Garbutt, Alcaraz

Goals: Coleman 18 (assisted Osman), Lennon 77 (assisted Coleman)

Bookings: Naismith 90+4 (kicking ball away)

Referee — Jon Moss (West Yorkshire) 5 The stoppage time booking for Steven Naismith was the first attempt to stop the flagrant time wasting that had gone on for an hour before that. Moss watched it all, pointed at his watch, and added the standard two minutes to the first half and four or five to the second. Niggled at the game from the side, like a mouse with a bit of cheese. Booked Yun harshly, justified yellow card for Hoilett. Made sure everybody’s throw in was taken from exactly the right spot. Annoying.

QPR 2 Burnley 0, Saturday December 6, 2014, Premier League

Eduardo Vargas was also impressive on the right wing, and during a brief spell in the centre of midfield while Henry had his head strapped up, but needs to add goals to his game. He had a shot cleared off the line after cutting inside onto his left foot but, really, goalkeeper Tom Heaton made a botched job of the save. The former QPR loanee was also lucky to survive a hideous challenge on Charlie Austin where he simultaneously smashed him in the face with a forearm and planted a studs up boot firmly in his midriff — no penalty awarded.

But in actual fact it only stirred the visitors. QPR’s bizarre struggles with oppositing kick offs continued here — Burnley immediately won a corner from theirs and Steven Caulker saved the day with a towering header almost under his own cross bar. Caulker stayed down clutching his head, forcing referee Jon Moss to stop the play as Burnley continued to pour forward — if he was injured fair enough, I suspect it was a cynical ploy and, frankly, QPR need a bit more of that having been caught out, particularly against Liverpool, being far too nice and unwilling to engage in such dark arts.

Prolonged periods of pressure saw Dunne toe a low Ings cross a fraction wide when a typical own goal looked likely. In the next attack Dunne produced a fantastic goal-saving tackle on Barnes who’d been set up by Ings, and Burnley’s main goal threat then headed wide when found with a deep cross at the back post and he should have scored. Boyd lashed over from the edge of the area when he had time and space to think more carefully about what he was going to do. Barton was very harshly penalised by Moss on the edge of the area for a foul on Ings when he appeared to have been sinned against — Rangers stood firm again but it felt like only a matter of time before they cracked. The clock seemed stuck on 60. A long night lay ahead.
Or so we though. Rangers have never been crash hot at doing things the easy way and they would play out time with ten men. Charlie Austin had already been booked by Moss for an ugly lunge on Tripper which could have been a red card by itself — although rangers have good cause to ask why they weren’t awarded a free kick on the edge of the area a second before when Fer was clearly fouled. Immediately after scoring he caught Michael Keane with a flailing arm challenging for a high ball and was off. Only the fifth and sixth bookings of his 51-game QPR career and his first ever red card in senior football.

But despite the numerical advantage, Burnley now no longer looked like they carried the belief they could get anything from the game. They’ll point to an incident eight minutes from time when Barnes appeared to be wrestled to the ground deep inside the QPR penalty box by Steven Caulker only for Moss to award the free kick the other way. But then they could have conceded a third goal when Yun Suk-Young raced through on goal at the end of a flowing move, seizing a fine pass from Leroy Fer before drawing a save from Tom Heaton. “I’d have lost my shit if he’d scored,” said one — hard to argue. Yun’s popularity grows with each passing performance.

QPR: Green 8; Isla 7, Dunne 8, Caulker 7, Suk-Young 6; Vargas 7 (Much 78, 6), Barton 6, Henry 6, Fer 7 (Phillips 90+1, -); Austin 7, Zamora 6 (Kranjcar 66, 7)

Subs not used: Ferdinand, McCarthy, Onuoha, Hoilett

Goals: Fer 51 (assisted Austin), Austin 74 (assisted Isla)

Red Cards: Austin 76 (two bookings)

Bookings: Fer 45+1 (foul) Austin 71 (foul), Austin 76 (elbow)

Burnley: Heaton 6; Trippier 6, Keane 6, Shackell 6, Mee 6; Boyd 7, Marney 6, Jones 6 (Jutkiewicz 86, -), Arfield 7 (Wallace 75, 6); Barnes 5 (Sordell 89, -), Ings 6

Subs not used: Reid, Kightly, Long, Gilks

Bookings: Barnes 46 (foul)

Referee — Jon Moss (West Yorkshire) 6 The Charlie Austin sending off was correct, although I thought Fer should have been awarded a free kick on the edge of the box just before his first yellow card. Heaton’s challenge on Austin in the first half, and Caulker’s on Barnes in the second, should probably both have been penalties.

Bournemouth 2 QPR 1, Saturday April 5, 2014, Championship

Austin had been on the pitch for no longer than three minutes when QPR were handed a way back into the game by Arter who, needlessly for a player of his ability, lunged into a wild tackle on Hoilett. The studs were showing and in this day and age any tackle where the player is deemed out of control is going to be taken very seriously by the officals. Referee Jon Moss was quick on the scene and brandished the red card.

The cries of “you fat bastard” from the home terraces as the Irishman cynically chopped down substitute Eunan O'Kane in the last few minutes and picked up a deserved booking were hard to argue with. The nippy front man made it look like Dunne was trying to run through treacle and the chronic lack of pace on show at the heart of the R’s defence when Clint Hill and Dunne are paired together is now an area opposition teams are targeting.


QPR: Green 7, Simpson 7, Dunne 4, Hill 6, Assou-Ekotto 6, Jenas 6 (Benayoun 72, 6), Carroll 7, Hoilett 6, Traore 7 (Zamora 80, 5), Morrison 6, Maiga 4 (Austin 65, 6).

Subs not used: Suk-Young, Murphy, Henry, Young

Goals: Traore 46 (assisted by Carroll)

Bookings: Morrison 83, Dunne 90

Bournemouth: Camp 7, Francis 6, Cook 6, Elphick 7, Harte 6, Ritchie 6 (Fraser 74, 6), Arter 7, Surman 8, Pugh 7, Kermorgant 7 (O’Kane 70, 6), Grabban 7 (Pitman 96, 6)

Subs not used: Allsop, Smith, Ward, Rantie.

Goals: Elphick 45 (assisted by Harte), Grabban 60

Bookings: Harte 77

Sent Off: Arter 67

Referee: Jon Moss 7 Refereed the game sensibly considering the wet conditions and had no real alternative to show the red to Arter, who blotted his copybook with the reckless challenge.

QPR 2 Derby County 1, Saturday November 2, 2013, Championship

On a yellow card and tiring, Faurlin may have reasonably expected to be substituted. He was starting to look leggy after a tremendous shift of hard work supressing his influence of prodigious young talent Will Hughes. Harry Redknapp gave him that bit longer and when your luck’s out, your luck’s out. Scan results pending, Ale Faurlin’s right knee crumpled beneath him during another challenge 13 minutes from time. Initially it looked like he was staying down to try and persuade referee Jon Moss — in eccentric form — not to issue him a second yellow card, but as the QPR medical team rushed to his attendance and Joey Barton knelt beside him and held his hand, the potential magnitude of what we were seeing started to hit home.

And yet the teams went in at half time deadlocked at one each. In the twenty seventh minute referee Jon Moss awarded a generous free kick to the visitors for an alleged foul by a mixture of Joey Barton and Ale Faurlin on Simon Dawkins midway inside the QPR half. Jamie Ward, almost as little as Little Tom Carroll, chipped the ball to the back post where centre half Jake Buxton rose fifteen feet into the air with the considerable advantage provided to him by placing both hands on Charlie Austin’s shoulders and headed across for Dawkins to volley into the net. It had to be a foul, but Moss was unmoved and the goal stood.

Having made a mistake what you then want from your match official is consistency. If Jake Buxton is allowed to lever himself that high into the sky using that method then Hill, Dunne and everybody else on the QPR side should be allowed to do the same thing. Moss, who refereed the whole game like an arrogant Premier League official believing this would be a comfortable walk in the park for a man of his ability and ego, instead decided that from that point on no climbing of any sort by any player would be allowed. Fine for that one moment, that one goal, but strictly frowned upon in every other circumstance for the rest of the afternoon.

Within seconds he’d whistled Charlie Austin for climbing over Buxton - the irony was lost on nobody — and on the half hour Jenas had to head a deep Derby free kick behind for a corner after Hill was adjudged to have held down Big Fat Chris Martin.

Then deep into the second half, with the Faurlin injury darkening the mood and the 2-1 lead looking needlessly fragile, Moss awarded a succession of dangerous Derby free kicks on the edge of the penalty box for Hill and Dunne doing exactly what Buxton had done for the goal. Robert Green scrambled across his line to claw one Ward effort out from under the bar, and another shot from the former Chesterfield winger dipped wide of the post with the QPR keeper covering all eventualities.

Bad fouls on Barton after 16 minutes by Ward and after 38 minutes by Hughes brought no card from Moss, and then a minute before half time the midfielder was kicked again without a free kick being awarded at all. By this point Barton’s tattered boot had flown off and the bemused midfielder pursued the referee down the field to show it to him and wonder about the rules of the game. Unusually Barton was able to channel the frustration into football, rather than retribution, and he jinked past two Derby men in first half injury time before teeing up Hoilett for a long range shot over the bar.

QPR: Green 7; Simpson 7, Dunne 6, Hill 7, Assou-Ekotto 7; Faurlin 8 (Henry 77, 6), Barton 8; Hoilett 6 (Traore 80, -) , Jenas 7, Phillips 7; Austin 6

Subs not used: Johnson, Onyewu, Wright-Phillips, Chevanton, Murphy

Goals: Jenas 11 (assisted Phillips/Austin), 63 (assisted Faurlin)

Bookings: Faurlin 65 (foul), Hoilett 67 (foul)

Derby: Grant 6; Wisdom 7 (Bennett 90, -), Keogh 6, Buxton 6, Forsyth 6; Ward 7, Eustace 6, Bryson 6, Hughes 7, Dawkins 6 (Sammon 72, 6); Martin 5

Subs not used: Smith, Jacobs, Freeman, Ball, Morch

Goals: Dawkins 23 (assisted Ward/Buxton)

Bookings: Martin 26 (diving), Wisdom 41 (foul), Eustace 45 (foul), Forsyth 61 (foul)

Referee — Jon Moss (West Yorkshire) 4 Wildly inconsistent, well short of the standards one would hope for from a Premier League official.

QPR 0 Arsenal 1, Saturday May 4, 2013, Premier League

This was an even match, far more so than it ever should have been given the form book. Tal Ben Haim, not a man Portsmouth fans would associate with a positive attitude, impressed from right back and made a conscious effort in the second half to chase and harry the visiting team as they attempted to control possession in their own half. That Ben Haim was selected ahead of Jose Bosingwa rather suggested Redknapp doesn’t actually believe what he’s saying himself. Later the manager sent on Shaun Derry for Mbia at half time to try and inject more of the same and his brutal chop on Thomas Rosicky that brought the easiest yellow card of referee Jon Moss’ career to date typified the desire not to let the Gunners have an easy ride on QPR’s own patch. That sort of thing has been sadly lacking this season — as has the flowing move where the Bobby Zamora, fresh from a three match ban, fed Traore on the run wide left and his cross presented Park with a chance to hit a deflected shot wide of the target.

And the Super Hoops continued to grow into the game at the start of the second half, with Townsend at the heart of some eye catching moves. An early chance from a free kick when Aaron Ramsey was rightly penalised by Moss for a handball saw Zamora nod a back post cross down into the area but behind all his team mates who’d got a little over excited and been sucked en masse into the goal mouth when anybody showing the intelligence to hang back slightly would have been rewarded with a simple tap in. No matter, soon Townsend was standing a dangerous cross up having accelerated to the byline and Jenas and Remy both delayed shots too long in the subsequent spell of pressure. When Townsend took on the shooting duties himself Szczesny’s fumbled save betrayed his nerves.

Arsenal were getting tetchy, niggly, and perhaps even a little worried. Monreal had no choice by to cynically hack Townsend to the floor and take a yellow card after the winger had burned him for pace and Ramsey allowed himself to be dragged into prolonged spells of whinging and moaning to referee Moss, often while the game went on around him. An advert for the Premier League, or Arsenal, it most certainly was not.

QPR: Green 6, Ben Haim 6, Onuoha 6, Hill 6, Traore 5 (Da Silva, 90 -), Townsend 7, Jenas 6, Mbia 5 (Derry, 46, 5), Park 5 (Taarabt 79, 6), Zamora 5, Remy 6

Subs not used: Murphy, Granero, Mackie, Bothroyd

Bookings: Derry 64 (foul), Jenas 77 (foul)

Arsenal: Szczesny 7, Sagna 6, Mertesacker 6, Koscielny 6, Monreal 5, Rosicky 6 (Vermaelen 90, -), Arteta 6, Ramsey 5, Cazorla 6 (Wilshere 89, -), Walcott 7, Podolski 5 (Oxlade-Chamberlain 85, -)

Subs not used: Mannone, Jenkinson, Coquelin, Gervinho

Goals: Walcott 1 (assisted Arteta)

Bookings: Monreal 58 (foul)

Referee Jon Moss (Yorkshire) 8 Very little to referee and went about his business in an unfussy manner and without attracting controversy. Might have benefited from telling Ramsey to shut up and go away.

QPR 0 Norwich 0, Saturday February 2, 2013, Premier League

Redknapp will have been disappointed with that, and tellingly it was Stephane Mbia, rather than the ageing Shaun Derry, who made way for Jermaine Jenas when he came on for a debut in the second half. Mbia is a wild, raw player — quite possibly a centre half playing out of position in midfield. He committed two cynical fouls to draw a warning from referee Jon Moss, and then received a yellow card for a third challenge on Snodgrass who curled the resulting free kick low around the wall and wide of the target. That seemed harsh on the Cameroonian, who got plenty of the ball in the Snodgrass challenge and was so furious about the award of a free kick it looked like he might talk himself into a red card. Mbia would no doubt point out that while he was warned after two fouls and booked after three, pantomime villain Grant Holt was whistled four times in the first half without so much as a word on the run from Moss who the let him off again with a fifth infringement immediately after the break.

Having seemed reluctant to book anybody but Mbia in the first half, Moss then went rather card happy in the second and showed yellow to Turner, Sebastien Bassong and Mark Bunn for their respective fouls on Jamie Mackie and Garrido for body checking Wright-Phillips after he’d run half the length of the field on a counter attack.

At this stage Taarabt looked like he was in the mood to put on a show and when Javier Garrido tempted the industrious Mackie with a slack pass back in the second period and goalkeeper Mark Bunn rushed from his line to upend the former Plymouth man it seemed the time had come. Taarabt, like Gallen before him, could only produce a tame shot in front of an expectant home crowd and Bunn saved easily. It was a sickener for Rangers, and Taarabt in particular who has been in wonderful form of late but seemed to be really effected by both his crucial miss and the attentions of Norwich’s Alexander Tettey who grew into his man marking role after a nervy beginning.

Once the penalty was missed QPR’s attacks became rather American Football-like on this Super Bowl weekend. Play would stop for a free kick or corner, Rangers would set something up, the play would run, and then the game would ground to a halt again. Taarabt probably wasn’t the best person to take a free kick on the edge of the area a minute after his spot kick horror and sure enough, after Mackie had been felled by Turner and Bradley Johnson had been yellow carded for his latest bout of screaming in a referee’s face, the Moroccan dollied a hopeless shot over the cross bar. When he did find the target in open play, after Zamora had intelligently nodded the ball down to him, Bunn produced a nervy save and was fortunate that Mackie couldn’t steal in on the rebound before the ball rolled too far away from the target for a decent shooting chance.

In the sixty sixth minute the pattern repeated again: Traore counter attacked and was well tackled, Taarabt picked the loose ball up and was fouled by Tettey who was also booked by Moss, Taarabt delivered the free kick, Samba headed goalwards, Turner kicked the ball wide. Ten minutes later Taarabt chipped a corner to the back post and Hill headed into the Lower Loft. Then, when Moss very harshly penalised Turned for a non-existent foul on Mackie as he tried to hold up a Zamora flick on, Jenas tried his luck with a direct free kick but could only find the wall.

QPR: Cesar 7, Da Silva 6 (Ben Haim 74, 6), Samba 7, Hill 6, Traore 6, Wright-Phillips 5 (Zamora 54, 7), Derry 6, Mbia 5 (Jenas 69, 6), Townsend 7, Taarabt 6, Mackie 6

Subs not used: Green, Park, Granero, Bothroyd

Bookings: Mbia 38 (repetitive fouling), Hill 70 (foul)

Norwich: Bunn 7, Martin 6, Turner 6, Bassong 6, Garrido 5, Snodgrass 7, Johnson 6, Pilkington 6 (E Bennett 20, 6), Tettey 7, Hoolahan 6 (Becchio 88, -) Holt 6

Subs not used: Camp, Whittaker, R Bennett, Howson, Jackson

Bookings: Garrido 51 (foul), Bunn 54 (foul), Johnson 57 (dissent), Tettey 66 (foul), Turner 80 (foul), Bassong 84 (foul)

Referee — Jon Moss (West Yorkshire) 6 The big decision in the game was the penalty and that was correctly judged, with a spot kick awarded and a yellow card for the goalkeeper. But I thought he was inconsistent in a number of other areas — very keen to penalise Mbia, warn him and then book him after three first half fouls but not even feeling the need to talk to Grant Holt until his fifth offence just after half time. Michael Turner can also count himself unfortunate to have been penalised and booked for a challenge on Jamie Mackie late in the game that didn’t even look like a foul to me. Not great, but not awful.

QPR 1 Everton 1, Sunday October 21, 2012, Premier League

Understandably, given the start they’ve made to the season, confidence is fragile among the QPR squad. The home side was fortunate not to fall behind twice within two minutes of being pulled level. First Nikica Jelavic fell in the area after Stephane Mbia trod on his foot but referee Moss waved the appeals away. Everton immediately forced a corner from which the marking was almost as dreadful as it had been from the free kick a moment before — this time Jagileka took time out from a dominant defensive display to smack a header against Cesar’s bar.

The second half was a nervy, staid, laboured affair punctuated by basic possession concession and pernickety refereeing.

While Diakite — and Granero in four minutes injury time at the end of the game — could have few complaints about Jon Moss’ decision to fetch out a yellow card the referee rather lost the lot somewhat just after the hour mark. First there was a late tackle on Hoilett by Pienaar that left the QPR man requiring treatment and the South African picking up Everton’s first yellow card of the afternoon, but when Phil Neville did something similar to the same player five minutes later Moss elected not to issue a yellow card having initially taken the book out of his pocket. Does Neville know something about Moss that he doesn’t want to get out or something? Whatever the Everton skipper said it appeared to talk the referee out of booking him which I can’t ever recall seeing before.

And the farce deepened a moment later when Bosingwa — much improved on a horrendous showing at The Hawthorns last time out — got going down the right and lost his footing after catching Pienaar with his foot as he went to cross the ball. It was barely a free kick and yet having awarded it Moss immediately sent Pienaar off for his second yellow of the afternoon. That was a ludicrous decision in my opinion, one of the softest most unjustified red cards I’ve ever seen and far, far less serious than several other incidents in the game that went unpunished.

There was a nervous, frustrated air around the place. The crowd quietened down, the team was laboured, and Hughes stuck rather than twisted. Everton were clearly happy with a point given the flagrant time wasting from Howard that went persistently without check from Moss and the late introduction of Heitinga for Jelavic, but they could easily have won the game. First Mirallas cut in from the left and struck a long range shot that looked destined for the top corner before flicking up an over the bar off Mbia. More lousy marking from the resulting corner could easily have brought Everton a winner but Cesar made an outstanding save to deny Jagielka and keep the scores level.

Of all the QPR players it was Junior Hoilett who was doing the most to try and secure a victory. Taarabt set him up for a low drive that Howard parried down and Granero blasted into the side netting when he really should have squared it back into the danger zone. Then the young Canadian was clearly brought down in the penalty area by Coleman after stealing the ball off him on his blind side but Moss wasn’t moved. The frustration at that injustice seemed to drive Hoilett on more and within 30 seconds he’d cut in from the left flank and driven a powerful shot towards the far corner that Howard kept out with a camera save.

Moss may have missed Hoilett being tripped, and the foul on Jelavic in the penalty area in the first half, and sent off a player for very little while letting others off with much worse, and basically been a pain in the arse for the entire second half, but one thing he did decide to be very hot on with two minutes to go was the placing of a free kick in the QPR penalty box. Cesar was told to move it back, which he did, and then told to move it back further, which he did, and then lectured by the referee which required him to run half the length of the field and back again before play could restart.

Mr Moss is a school teacher, and don’t we all remember a school teacher like him? When there’s bullying, some kid setting fire to stuff, a fight, a serious issue he can be found hiding in the staff room. When there’s a kid wearing the wrong colour shoes, or a tie that’s a bit too shot, he’s there on the scene with detention slips. A fiddling while Rome burns sort of a fellow. What on earth did he gain by delaying the match for a minute forcing Cesar to take a free kick deep in his own half seven yards away from where he actually placed it in the final minute of the game? Do me a bloody favour.

QPR: Cesar 6, Bosingwa 6, Nelsen 6 (Ferdinand 83 -), Mbia 6, Traore 6 (Onuoha 72, 6), Park 6, Diakite 7, Granero 7, Taarabt 6, Hoilett 7, Zamora 5 (Cisse 71, 5)

Subs not used: Green, Wright-Phillips, Faurlin, Mackie

Goals: Hoilett 2 (unassisted)

Bookings: Diakite 66 (foul), Granero 90 (foul)

Everton: Howard 7, Coleman 6, Distin 7, Jagielka 8, Baines 6, Osman 6, Pienaar 6, Neville 6, Mirallas 6, Jelavic 6 (Heitinga 83, -), Anichebe 5 (Naismith 52, 6)

Goals: Cesar og 33 (assisted Distin/Pienaar)

Bookings: Pienaar 51 (foul), 60 (foul)

Sent off: Pienaar 60 (two bookings)

Referee: Jon Moss 4 Three big decisions in the game — two penalty appeals and a red card — and he got all of them wrong. Compounded that by paying intricate, microscopic attention to several incidents that he could have comfortably ignored altogether in the interests of getting the game to flow a bit more, while missing things that were actually important and needed dealing with. “Typical school teacher,” my dad would have said. And he should know, he was married to one.

West Brom 1 QPR 0, Saturday April 14, 2012, Premier League

Zamora was warned for dissent by referee Jon Moss, who I actually thought had a very decent game, which betrayed the striker’s frustration with his performance and that of those around him. Dorrans shot at Kenny after Diakite had been caught in possession during a prolonged wait for a team mate to offer a passing option. The in the next attack a delightful back heal from Odemwingie found Jones on a trademark late run from deep and although he beat Kenny with a scuffed shot it rebounded back into play off the goalkeeper.

The teams then swapped yellow cards: Mulumbu took one from Jon Moss for chopping down Nedum Onuoha who sadly looked very much like a centre back playing out of position in this game, then Diakite’ late hit on Fortune brought him his weekly booking. West Brom played on through that foul and Thomas should have done better than crossing to nobody at the end of a flowing move.

Awarded a throw in when he wanted a free kick Ridgwell spent an inordinate amount of time sitting on the floor tending to his socks, then ignored the young boy who was trying to return the ball to him and allowed it to roll onto the pitch, and finally took time out to gesture towards Mark Hughes who was questioning just why on earth a routine throw in was taking this long. Referee Jon Moss watched all this, and then showed the left back a yellow card. Credit to the official.

Traore won a corner ten minutes from time that Barton took and Helguson headed wide, but for all the possession and pressure gilt edged chances were thin on the ground. In fact as time ran down into a generous four minutes of added time West Brom actually started to get more joy on the counter attack — Moss’ harsh decision to penalise Hill for holding down Long gave Brunt a free kick opportunity that he beat the wall with but not Kenny, and then Long went himself in open play but was worried out of the shot by the attention of Nedum Onuoha who did well covering in behind his centre backs.

West Brom: Foster 8, Jones 7, McAuley 6, Dawson 6, Ridgewell 6, Brunt 7, Mulumbu 7, Dorrans 7 (Andrews 71, 6), Thomas 7 (Scharner 80, -), Fortune 6 (Long 59, 6), Odemwingie 7

Subs Not Used: Daniels, Shorey, Hurst, Cox

Booked: Mulumbu (foul), Ridgewell (time wasting), Dorrans (foul)

Goals: Dorrans 22. QPR: Kenny 5, Onuoha 5, Ferdinand 6, Hill 7, Taiwo 7 (Traore 77, 6), Barton 6, Diakite 6, Derry 5 (Wright-Phillips 56, 6), Mackie 6, Zamora 6, Taarabt 6 (Helguson 75, 6)

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Gabbidon, Buzsaky, Young

Booked: Diakite (foul)

Referee: Jon Moss (W Yorkshire) 8 Given QPR’s recent luck with referees, and Moss’ abject performance at West Ham v Birmingham last weekend, this appointment didn’t thrill me greatly when the list came through earlier in the week. However, thankfully, I thought he controlled the game very well indeed. The bookings were justified, especially Liam Ridgwell’s and he clamped down further on West Brom’s time wasting with a big chunk of added time at the end of a second half that had included just one injury. Moments of dispute but no serious controversy, very decent all in all.

QPR 3 Wigan 1, Saturday January 21, 2012, Premier League

Wigan pressed pretty consistently and brought on Albert Crusat for Jordi Gomez to liven things up even more. Things got really tense after 65 minutes when Maynor Figueroa was fouled by Buzsaky in combination with Barton in a position not dissimilar to the one from where Buzsaky had scored. The foul looked harsh at the time but Rodallega needed no second invitation, bending the ball up over the wall and down into the net to a motionless Kenny’s left. A brilliant goal to be honest and more fuel for the rant about set pieces that follows later.

In the aftermath of the goal Wigan bought on Ronnie Stam in place of Emmerson Boyce. A few minutes later, Conor Sammon should have equalised but his shot was weak and wide. It’s a fine margin between failure and glory in this game and that was underlined a minute later when referee Moss decided that a pretty routine wrestling match between Caldwell and Helguson was a foul on our hero. It was just inside the box and he pointed to the spot. Now I would not have let Helguson take the penalty. Al Habsi had shown in the first half just how good he was and Helguson’s style was always going to be to his liking. Al Habsi stood stock still until Helguson made his choice then flung himself across the goal to turn the firm shot round his right post.

A fairly standard delivery sailed into the area and for some reason best known to himself McCarthy, under no particular pressure, waved a hand at it and made contact. McCarthy was booked, Helguson stepped forward to take the penalty and despatched it to Al Habsi’s left. What was notable was the way that Al Habsi stood stock still as Helguson ran up thus denying Helguson his usual trick of rolling the ball to the side the goalie has just left. This ability of Al Habsi to move late was to be crucial later on.

So, a 1-0 lead. We’ve been here before, but it was a good start and the mood of the church was benign. We even heard what was probably the first use of the word ‘thrice’ in a football song, or if not the first altogether certainly the first since the nineteenth century. We are going to beat Chelsea three times, apparently...

It was pleasing to see Buzsaky looking like his old self and in the thirty-ninth minute he was given the chance to take on a free kick from outside the box. He hit it with some venom and Al Habsi did well to turn it round the post. Then in the forty third minute a promising break from QPR looked to be about to fizzle out due to indecision when Gohouri upended DJ Campbell just outside the box to give Buzsaky another shooting chance and earn himself a yellow card. As the wall formed Buzsaky was all concentration, standing well to the left of the ball and very much lined up to put the ball to Al Habsi’s right. This he did, spectacularly well, clearing the outstretched fingers of the goalie and hitting the inside of the post. There was a worrying moment as the ball seemed to bobble along the line but it then clearly hit the side netting at the other side of the goal and HQ erupted.

QPR: Kenny 7, Hill 6, Ferdinand 7, Hall 7, Young 7, Wright-Phillips 6, Barton 6, Buzsaky 8 (Derry 82 6), Mackie 6, Helguson 7, Campbell 5 (Smith 45, 6)

Subs Not Used: Czerny, Orr, Ramage, Bothroyd, Macheda

Booked: Barton (foul), Young (foul)

Goals: Helguson 33 (penalty, McCarthy handball), Buzsaky 45 (freekick), Smith (assisted Wright-Phillips)

Wigan : Al Habsi 8, Gohouri 6, Caldwell 6, Boyce 6 (Stam 69 6), Figueroa 6, McCarthy 5, Watson 7, Moses 7, Gomez 6 (Crusat 61 6), McArthur 6 (Sammon 45 6), Rodallega 7

Subs Not Used: Pollitt, Lopez, Di Santo, McManaman

Booked: Gohouri (foul), McCarthy (handball)

Goals: Rodallega 66 (free kick)

Referee: Jon Moss ( West Yorkshire ) 7 Did not do a lot wrong and kept the game flowing. The first penalty was stonewall, the second more dubious but at least he was decisive. The Wigan free kick that led to their goal looked soft in real time.

Norwich 1 QPR 0, Saturday January 1, 2011, Championship

Buoyed by the opening goal Norwich quickly took the game over and dominated the remainder of the half. After a quarter of an hour Wilbraham ran onto Holt’s flick in the penalty area but lifted a volleyed shot high over the bar. Then five minutes later a free kick awarded to Norwich by referee Jon Moss when Holt appeared to be the aggressor, backing into Connolly and then collapsing comically when the ball arrived, caused mass panic in the QPR penalty area. The set piece was delivered to the back post and headed down into the heart of the six yard box where carnage ensued, Paddy Kenny fumbled the ball on the line under pressure, Faurlin tried to hack it away but succeeded only in striking it against Chris Martin and the ball few into the net off him — although the whistle had long since been blown for either offside from the initial downward header, a foul on Kenny, or handball as the ball flew into the net.

The first five minutes of the second half revolved around referee Jon Moss, and three key decisions that went against QPR. First Shaun Derry was felled having clearly been caught flush in the face by a stray hand in an aerial challenge — a free kick was awarded, which Taarabt hammered high over the bar as ever, but no card was produced.

Then Patrick Agyemang had the Norwich defence backpeddling as he ran at them with the ball. After turning inside and then out again the giant striker hit the ground under an untidy challenge from Andrew Crofts. It was a clear foul, the only question being whether it was inside or outside the penalty area. Moss decreed outside, and I think he was right to do so but the QPR players erupted with rage that no penalty had been awarded — Shaun Derry spent a prolonged period of time berating the linesman in front of the away end to no avail. As usual the free kick came to nothing, Taarabt hammered it straight into the wall, and the frankly abysmal quality of our set pieces remains a major concern.

Then to compound matters Rangers found themselves reduced to nine men (Clarke can hardly count himself as one considering his lack of effect on proceedings) with a sending off entirely of their own making. In possession of the ball under little pressure 40 yards away from his own goal Kaspars Gorkss decided to play the ball back to Paddy Kenny rather than go forward. Kenny found himself confronted by Wilbraham, with the ball bobbling around on an awkward surface, and his hurried clearance barely made the halfway line and was immediately headed back in behind the QPR defence into the path of Holt. So having held controlled possession of the ball just short of the halfway line, suddenly QPR were well and truly on the back foot and under intense pressure from Holt who did what he always does — got goalside of his man, handled the ball as it came out of the sky, and then theatrically fell to the floor with his arms outstretched appealing to the referee. Moss quickly arrived on the scene, unswayed by Holt’s own admission in the press following last week’s game with Sheffield United that he isn’t afraid to engage in the game’s dark arts, and sent Connolly off — the second time this season he has been shown a red card, and the second time in as many appearances at Carrow Road he has made an enforced early departure. Irritating though the whole situation was the red card was the only option once Holt had hit the deck and QPR have only themselves to blame for creating the problem in the first place.

Chris Martin drilled over the bar just before the hour as Norwich looked to press home their numerical advantage but all eyes were on the referee again as the game entered its final third. Having supported the decisions Moss made for the Agyemang penalty appeal, and the Connolly sending off, I’m afraid I have to criticise the official for the way he refereed minutes 61 to 63. Firstly a cynical, nasty and vicious hit was put in on Adel Taarabt in front of the dugouts after he had passed the ball —so late and long after the ball had been played in fact that Moss had already turned his back but it occurred right in front of the fourth official and linesman and had everybody on the QPR bench on their feet and protesting. When play came to a stop Moss went across to speak with his colleagues and find out what had happened. I’d love to have been privy to the conversation because the frankly ludicrous outcome of it all was play on, with no further action taken.

Taarabt had every right to feel aggrieved, and within 30 seconds he was taking out his frustration on the Norwich players with immaculate control and a double drag back that carried him beyond the challenges of two home players. Michael Nelson then quite deliberately and cynically chopped Taarabt to the ground and although a free kick was forthcoming this time, no yellow card was produced. Now again I can perhaps support the official in that decision because he is known as a referee that likes to keep his cards to himself and I’ve said many times before that I don’t go to a game to see people booked and sent off and a lot of whistle blown, however when QPR wasted the free kick yet again Taarabt then fouled Hoolahan as he collected possession wide on the right and was immediately yellow carded. Now I’m sorry but that’s biased officiating. Taarabt’s foul was no different to Nelson’s in any way whatsoever, and as Hoolahan was deep in his own half with few options and going nowhere I cannot possibly see how that is a yellow card when Nelson’s trip on a forward moving and threatening Taarabt was not.

Neil Warnock had seen enough and could probably tell what was about to happen with Taarabt’s suspect temperament being tested to the maximum. He removed the Moroccan from the fray, replacing him with Cypriot Georgios Tofas on his QPR debut. This was a shame in many ways because Taarabt is a big threat to opponents, he was only removed because of the piss poor way the referee had behaved with him and it used up a final sub leaving QPR to battle on with Leon Clarke still on the pitch.

Norwich: Ruddy 7, R Martin 7, Nelson 6, Whitbread 6, Drury 6, Smith 7, Crofts 7, Hoolahan 8, C Martin 7, Holt 8, Wilbraham 6 (Gill 82,-)

Subs Not Used: Rudd, Jackson, Johnson, McNamee, Tudur Jones, Berthel Askou

Goals: R Martin 10 (assisted C Martin)

QPR: Kenny 8, Walker 6, Gorkss 6, Connolly 5, Hill 6 (Orr 46, 6), Derry 7, Faurlin 6, Clarke 4, Mackie 6, Taarabt 6 (Tofas 62, 6), Helguson 5 (Agyemang 46, 7)

Subs Not Used: Cerny, Rowlands, Hulse, Borrowdale

Sent Off: Connolly 51 (denying obvious goal scoring opportunity)

Booked: Hill (foul), Taarabt (foul)

Referee: Jon Moss ( W Yorkshire ) 6 Two big decisions in the game — the Agyemang penalty appeal and the Connolly red card. I felt he got both decisions correct. However I thought he was inconsistent on a number of other fronts — Taarabt in particular was booked for a much more meagre offence than one which had been committed against him just seconds earlier.

QPR 1 Leicester 2, Friday October 30, 2009

Magilton had seen enough and replaced Damion Stewart, possibly carrying an injury and certainly massively off his best on the night, with Fitz Hall ten minutes into the half. Hall played reasonably well thereafter, although he was very fortunate not to give away a penalty when he appeared to wrestle Fryatt to the ball in the box — referee Jon Moss waved the appeals away in what was just about the only possible mistake he made in an evening of near perfect officiating.

QPR: Cerny 5, Ramage 5 (Vine 67, 6), Stewart 4 (Hall 54, 6), Gorkss 6, Borrowdale 6, Routledge 6, Buzsaky 6, Leigertwood 5, Faurlin 5,Taarabt 7 (Agyemang 86, -), Simpson 6

Subs Not Used: Heaton, Alberti, Ainsworth, Parker

Goals: Taarabt 33 (assisted Simpson)

Leicester: Weale 7, Neilson 7, Brown 7, Hobbs 6, Berner 6, King 6, Oakley 7, Wellens 7, N'Guessan 8, Waghorn 9 (McGivern 90, -),Fryatt 8 (Gallagher 75, 6)

Subs Not Used: Logan, Morrison, Howard, Dyer, Kermorgant

Booked: Neilson, N'Guessan, Oakley

Goals: Fryatt 37, 64

Referee: Jon Moss (W Yorkshire) 9 Leicester probably should have had a penalty in the second half when Hall pulled Fryatt to the floor but Moss was otherwise almost completely faultless and this was just about as good a refereeing performance as you are ever likely to see at this level.

Wolves 1 QPR 0, Saturday April 18, 2009

There was also a change of referee from the advertised appointment. John Moss came in for Kevin Wright who was presumably injured.

At the other end Rangers had a half chance to take the lead as the twentieth minute approached. Wayne Routledge pinched a loose ball midway through the Wolves half and seemed to have a chance to run through on goal but Jody Craddock came across as the last defender and got an untidy but effective tackle in on the little winger before he could get a shot away. Routledge appealed to referee Moss in vain for a foul.

Referee Moss compounded QPR frustration with the first yellow card of the match for Jordi Lopez after he had challenged Karl Henry in the air. Lopez had twice been warned by the official after previous fouls so in fairness it seemed that the card was for repetitive fouling rather than that one specifically.

Down at the other end referee John Moss had to keep a close eye on two clashes between goalscorer Ebanks Blake and QPR keeper Radek Cerny just before the hour mark. First the striker challenged him in the six yard box after a corner and then seemed to grab hold of him as Cerny tried to launch a quick counter attack. That sparked a bit of a hand bags session and when Kaspars Gorkss first mis-controlled a high through ball and then left a header back to the Czech slightly shortit gave Ebanks Blake a chance to leave a boot in a second time — which he duly did. Cerny was content to get up and play the ball when he could have made more of it.

With five minutes to go QPR had an ideal chance to equalise. Wayne Routledge seemed to be fouled forty yards from goal as he burst through the centre of the Wolves midfield but referee Moss waved play on. The ball broke to Helguson on the edge of the penalty area and he certainly was chopped down crudely by Berra. Adel Taarabt seemed the most likely striker of the ball as Molineux fell into a nervous silence but ultimately Hogan Ephraim took responsibility and lofted a pretty pathetic chipped effort over the wall and the cross bar by some distance. Taarabt gave his team mate a daggered look — I can’t see Hogan being at the front of the queue for one of those next week against Plymouth should the chance arrive.

Moss added four minutes on at the end of the game during which Vokes volleyed wide from a Harewood knockdown. It was clear from the moment Ephraim put his free kick over the bar that QPR would not equalise and the atmosphere inside Molineux was fit to burst. Repeated pleas over the public address system for fans to remain off the pitch were clearly not going to be heeded and so, roughly a minute early, the referee picked up the ball in the corner as Harewood attempted to waste time and blew the final whistle. Suddenly thousands of people were pouring onto the pitch and the QPR players had to make a swift exit to avoid behind caught up in it all.

Wolves: Hennessey 7, Foley 6, Craddock 8, Berra 7, Ward 6 (Stearman 79, 6), Edwards 7, Henry 7, Jones 6 (Vokes 65, 6), Jarvis 8, Ebanks-Blake 7 (Harewood 60, 6), Keogh 7

Subs Not Used: Higgs, Reid

Booked: Stephen Ward (foul)

Goals: Ebanks-Blake 46 (assisted Keogh)

QPR: Cerny 7, Ramage 6, Stewart 5, Gorkss 8, Connolly 7, Routledge 6, Lopez 7 (Leigertwood 85, -), Mahon 7, Cook 5 (Ephraim 63, 6), Vine 6 (Taarabt 63, 7), Helguson 5

Subs Not Used: Delaney, Miller

Booked: Lopez (repetitive fouling)

Referee: Jon Moss ( W Yorkshire ) 6 A late replacement and I felt he was a little bit one sided in the first half, with the home fans baying every fifty fifty decision went their way. Second half he was much better and with only two cards in total deserves some credit for the way he handled a tough game overall. One of the linesmen, the one at the far end from the QPR fans, was dire.

QPR 0 Reading 0, Saturday January 31, 2009

The second half began with a pathetic incident. Michael Duberry lumbered across the pitch just inside his own half and was confronted by Heidar Helguson. The QPR striker challenged him for the ball at which point Duberry flung himself to the ground and let out a scream so loud and high pitched that it had proprietors of all girls’ boarding schools across Western Europe rushing to the dormitory’s fearing a break in by Russell Brand. Duberry’s collapse and yelp was so dramatic that the Reading club doctor was robed up and prepped for surgery before he had even hit the ground and so it was something of a surprise when the screaming and knee clutching came to an immediate halt when the referee awarded a free kick at which point he immediately leapt up and raced off down the field to contest the resulting set piece in the QPR penalty area.

Cheating. No other word for it. And it was not the first time. Duberry is a fairly hefty guy, in the same way as Lisa Riley is fairly hefty, but the way he consistently collapsed to the floor and moaned to the match officials was embarrassing. I was embarrassed for him. The Duberry v Helguson battle was the one area of the game I thought referee Jon Moss got wrong on the day — Helguson ended up with a booking for repetitive fouls against the big useless lump when often the offence was minimal if it happened at all.

Still Duberry got his comeuppance later in the second half when he attempted to fend off Hogan Ephraim and shelter a through ball out for a goal kick. Somehow Ephraim, built like a chicken stick, managed to not only shift Duberry, built like a kebab shop owner, but also kick the ball off him and win a corner which Rangers promptly wasted. Duberry, wouldn’t you just know it, thought Ephraim had fouled him and was booked for suggesting to the referee that he had given the corner on the say so of the home supporters in the Loft End.

Another cross into the area a minute later caused further panic when Camp spilled it under pressure from/while being fouled by Lita and Hunt stabbed the loose ball wide of the open goal while simultaneously screaming for a penalty for a late tackle by Gorkss. Moss showed no interest in the complaints from either Camp or Hunt.

Probably as sick and tired of the farce as the rest of us Jon Moss decided that was enough and blew the final whistle seconds later. QPR had shaded the first half, Reading the second, in the end a draw was a more than fair result.

QPR: Camp 6, Connolly 7, Stewart 8, Gorkss 8, Delaney 8, Routledge 7, Mahon 8 (Ephraim 77, 6), Leigertwood 7, Miller 8, Cook 5 (Di Carmine 90, -), Helguson 5 (Blackstock 85, -)

Subs Not Used: Hall, Alberti

Booked: Helguson (repetitive fouling)

Reading: Federici 6, Rosenior 7, Duberry 5, Pearce 7, Armstrong 7, Kebe 7 (Gunnarsson 90, -), Harper 6, Cisse 6, Stephen Hunt 6, Lita 6, Doyle 6

Subs Not Used: Andersen, Matejovsky, Bikey, Long

Booked: Stephen Hunt (foul), Duberry (dissent)

Referee: Jon Moss ( W Yorkshire ) 8 Not too bad at all, very good in fact. I did feel however that he bought a lot of the play acting, particularly from Kebe and Duberry, and the booking of Helguson was harsh.

Colchester 4 QPR 2, Tuesday 2 October, 2007

Harford switched to a 4-3-3 formation by introducing Sahar for Jarrett but this just opened things up even more at the back and took up a lot of the space Vine was working in. Dexter Blackstock was looking tired and laboured again, although he did draw a booking from Duguid after chasing a lost cause down to the corner. He looks like he could do with a rest really.

Ephraim wasn't as impressive in the second half as he had been in the first and picked up a booking for fouling Yeates after cashing him back into the Rangers half. Ainsworth got a card himself for a similar offence on the other side of the field against George Elokobi. All in all Rangers just petered out. Virgo was unlucky not to extend the lead when he headed just wide of the bottom corner after Platt had set him up.

Colchester: Gerken 5, Duguid 6, Baldwin 6, Virgo 6, Elokobi 5, Yeates 8, Izzet 7, Jackson 7, Granville 8, Lisbie 7, Platt 7.

Subs Not Used: Cousins, Guy, Guttridge, Connolly, Elito

Booked: Duguid (foul), Jackson (foul), Platt (foul)

Goals: Leigertwood 19 og (unassisted), Izzet 30 (assisted Granville), Yeates 38 (assisted Lisbie), Platt 63 (assisted Yeates)

QPR: Camp 6, Rowlands 5, Leigertwood 4, Cullip 4, Barker 6, Ainsworth 5 (Moore 85, -), Jarrett 6 (Sahar 75, 6), Bolder 4, Ephraim 7, Blackstock 5, Vine 8.

Subs Not Used: Cole, Bignot, Stewart

Booked: Bolder (foul), Ephraim (foul), Ainsworth (foul)

Goals: Ephraim 29 (assisted Vine), Vine 58 (assisted Ainsworth)

Referee: Jon Moss ( W Yorkshire ) 7 - Pretty sensible display all round although I really don't think it was a foul from Bolder that led to the third goal. I can sympathise with him because the rules outlaw tackles from behind but this is a contact sport and that was a good tackle.

Stats


Moss is in the Championship following his shambolic handling of Leicester West Ham where he managed to award two penalties that weren’t, and turn down twice that many that were, in a mad 90 minutes of nonsense.
The five yellows and a red shown in that game take his total to the season to 91 bookings and seven reds in 30 games. Four of those red cards have come in his last nine games. He was in charge for Burnley’s 0-0 draw at Wolves back in November.
Last season he sent off nine and booked a hefty 142 in 37 outings. Four of the red cards came in a clutch at the start of the season and his biggest haul in a single game so far was seven yellows and a red in Everton’s 2-1 loss at Stamford Bridge, but no yellow card for Ivanovic taking McCarthy in a headlock you may recall.

The two QPR games Moss refereed the previous year were rare forays outside the Premier League for the former school teacher — 29 of his 35 appointments were in the top flight or the two cup competitions. Within those he showed 105 yellows and four reds — three bookings a game on average — with the nine yellows in Man City’s home game with Everton by far his biggest single haul.

In 2012/13 Moss showed 86 yellows (a low 2.77 average a game) and just one red in 31 appointments. That red of course came at Loftus Road against Everton and although he followed that game immediately with a big seven card haul at Wigan v West Ham and he matched that at QPR’s home match with Norwich.

In 2011/12, his first on the Elite List, Moss showed 112 yellows and 11 reds in 32 matches (3.5 bookings a game). From the end of September to the end of December he went on an extraordinary run of six red cards in ten outings and in his last match he very harshly dismissed two Millwall players leading them to collapse to a 6-0 home defeat against Birmingham City. He showed at least one card in every match he refereed that season, and only showed less than three in a game on six occasions. His biggest haul in a single game was six yellows and one red at Sheff Utd v Notts County over Christmas.

The previous year he showed a more respectable 87 yellows (2.07 a game) and ten reds in 42 games across the season.

Other Listings

League One >>> Stuart Attwell has Blackpool v Wigan.

League Two >>> Gavin Ward has Orient v Mansfield, Trevor Kettle is at Cambridge v Plymouth.

Tweet @loftforwords

Pictures — Action Images

Photo: Action Images



Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.



TacticalR added 00:23 - Apr 27
His performance in the Leicester v West Ham game was eccentric indeed.

It will be interesting to see if he decides to liven up our next game by giving out random penalties.
0

davman added 06:39 - Apr 27
So, all defenders should bring handcuffs and other *restraining toys* to lock down anything in an opposition shirt that tries to move inside the penalty area at corns as Moss showed that anything goes...

...Except that one random time that he thinks he should do something.

Love the fact that he gets relegated to officiate a vital game in Bunley's season although, to be fair, they'll win easily with us on the beach...
0


You need to login in order to post your comments

Blogs 31 bloggers

Knees-up Mother Brown #22 by wessex_exile
Knees-up Mother Brown #18 by wessex_exile

Blackpool Polls

About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Advertising
© FansNetwork 2024