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Why Arsenal Fans Must Share Blame For Michael Oliver Death Threats
Except what’s been really striking about this particular 48 hours is that it’s not just the usual Arsenal-based sources of that fevered online discourse.
This time, everyone in the football media appears to have suffered simultaneous widespread and catastrophic headloss.
The reaction to Myles Lewis-Skelly’s red card at Wolves has been truly astonishing. We have spent much of the last day and a half feeling like we’ve taken crazy pills.
First up, let’s just say this. We don’t think it was a red card. We think it’s quite harsh. But the vitriolic and fevered response has been wildly over the top.
It is at the very, very least a high-scoring yellow. It’s the type of take-one-for-the-team cynical, counter-attack-preventing move we’ve all seen plenty of times and for which the standard, basic punishment is always going to be a yellow card. Factor in that this deliberate act of foul play incorporates what we’re willing to accept an accidental raking of studs upon leg, and you can surely see why a referee might upgrade that yellow to red. You don’t have to agree with it – we don’t – but it isn’t inexplicable.
Similarly, once a red card has been given on field and the VAR sees studs on leg above the boot, you have to acknowledge that it no longer becomes as straightforward as people have insisted to just simply overturn that decision. It is not at that stage an objectively, indisputably, factually clear error that requires correction.
There are mitigating and exacerbating factors at play here. There’s no use pretending the fact it’s Arsenal isn’t part of the picture. They set the temperature on these matters, for better and worse. The fact Lewis-Skelly is a young player with a clean rap sheet is also a big part of it.
We’d go so far as to say there are certain players who could commit that exact tackle and receive the exact same punishment and we’d hear no more about it beyond Gary Neville watching the replay on commentary, making that ‘Oooooh’ noise he makes when he thinks someone is in trouble and then confirming this by saying out loud ‘I think he might be in trouble’.
But we’re getting off track a bit there. The point is this: it probably shouldn’t have been a red card, but it is not a decision that defies belief or one that simply cannot be explained without recourse to dark conspiracy theories and the rest of that kind of maddening guff.
We’d seen and heard some initial reaction on Saturday afternoon before seeing any footage of the actual incident. When we did see it, we were genuinely a bit annoyed. Certainly a bit underwhelmed. We’d been promised an all-time clusterf*ck disgrace of a decision and instead we got a ‘Yeah, pretty harsh that, will probably be overturned on appeal, won’t it, but can see where the ref’s coming from’. Which is absolutely no good at all.
Perhaps that’s why everyone decided to continue insisting a season-defining disgrace had occurred. Even after Arsenal managed to win the match.
The football punditocracy commenced a 24-hour period of intense scrutiny and wild criticism of this one refereeing decision, scrutiny and criticism that was not applied to anything any footballer or manager did or didn’t do this weekend.
The gobsh*tes of talk radio lined up to declare it a shocker, incompetent, horrendous and the rest, as you’d expect.
More worryingly, even the Match of the Day pundits lost their minds. Alan Shearer, a pundit of whom we’ve grown increasingly fond over the years, called it ‘one of the worst decisions I have seen in a long time’ which, given the amount of football Shearer watches for that job, simply cannot actually be the case.
News
Roy Keane Blasts ‘Frightened’ Manchester United After West Ham Draw
Manchester United thought they had the job wrapped up at Old Trafford… until they didn’t.
Diogo Dalot’s tidy finish just before the hour mark looked like the moment that would push the Red Devils to a much-needed victory. But in classic 2025 Manchester United fashion, control slipped, intensity dipped, and West Ham pounced.
And of course—when things go wrong—Roy Keane is never far from the verbal action.
“They Weren’t Nasty Enough!” – Keane Fires Shots
After the 1-1 draw, Keane wasted zero time calling out what he sees as the real issue at United: timidity.
According to him, United “took their foot off the gas” right after scoring. Against a team in the bottom three, he expected more authority, more aggression, and definitely more hunger.
Instead, what he saw was a team “almost frightened” of finishing the job.
He slammed the players for hiding when pressure kicked in, criticized their lack of killer instinct, and even called out the relaxed body language during substitutions.
In typical Keane fashion, the message was simple:
United should never be this soft.
Amorim Also Frustrated: “The Game Was Ours To Win”
Manager Ruben Amorim didn’t sugarcoat anything either.
While he didn’t go full-Keane, he admitted:
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United lost control after scoring
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They failed to win second balls
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They should have killed the match earlier
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The inconsistency is becoming a real problem
For a team chasing European places, three draws in five games simply isn’t good enough.
West Ham Deserved Their Point
To be fair, West Ham didn’t just sit back and wait. They fought, pressed, countered, and eventually got their reward when Soungoutou Magassa slotted home the 83rd-minute equaliser.
United had late chances, but the story of their season resurfaced again:
moments created, moments wasted.
Where Do United Go From Here?
Sitting eighth on the table, United’s inconsistency continues to be their biggest opponent. Keane believes the team lacks bite. Amorim believes the team lacks control.
Fans believe the team lacks… well, everything except drama.
What’s clear is this: until United find their identity and intensity, nights like this will keep happening.
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Local News
Beckham Joins Bellingham & Trent to Unveil Retro Gunmetal Adidas Predator Mania
Beckham Links Up With The New Generation
Adidas just pulled off the ultimate fusion of eras — pairing Real Madrid legend David Beckham with modern-day stars Jude Bellingham and Trent Alexander-Arnold to unveil the new throwback Predator Mania Gunmetal.
The visual alone is powerful:
Beckham, the man who helped define the Predator legacy, standing alongside the players shaping a new generation at the Santiago Bernabéu.
It’s nostalgia meeting modern football culture in the cleanest way possible.
How Beckham & Zidane Made The Predator A Cultural Icon
In the 2000s, football boots had personalities — and none louder than the Predator.
Thanks to players like:
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David Beckham
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Zinedine Zidane
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Steven Gerrard
…the Predator brand became more than footwear — it became a symbol of confidence, control, and creativity.
Beckham’s signature whip-your-free-kick technique and the unforgettable fold-over tongue made Predator Mania one of the most legendary boots ever created.
And now in 2025, it’s back — reborn with purpose.
A Historic Gunmetal Colourway Returns
The 2025 Predator Mania comes in a stunning Gunmetal grey, blending early-2000s nostalgia with fresh modern flair.
Adidas describes it as:
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“Metallic, polished and aggressive”
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Featuring crisp white Three Stripes
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And the iconic red fold-over tongue — embroidered and unapologetically bold
Beckham famously wore this colourway during his early Real Madrid days.
It quickly became a cult favourite, often called “one of the most photogenic boots of its era.”
Now it’s back — and it looks better than ever.
Engineered For Today’s Game
While the look is faithful, adidas didn’t simply remake the past — they improved it.
The 2025 Predator Mania is crafted in the historic Scheinfeld factory in Germany, the birthplace of many legendary Predator lines.
Key enhancements include:
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Upgraded comfort
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Subtle structural refinement
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Increased responsiveness
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Modern fit for today’s style of play
In short:
Old-school swagger meets high-performance engineering.
Back On The Bernabéu Grass
The revival feels even more fitting because two current Real Madrid stars — Bellingham and Alexander-Arnold — will bring the Gunmetal Mania back to the Santiago Bernabéu pitch.
From Beckham’s free-kick artistry to Bellingham’s midfield dominance and Trent’s laser passing…
the Predator legacy remains in elite company.
Adidas couldn’t have scripted a better generational handover.
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