The Mail on Sunday

Now we can all hear the screams, games sound more like a slasher movie. Can players stop trying to con referees?

- Oliver Holt CHIEF SPORTS WRITER

AFOOTBALL match without fans in a stadium built for tens of thousands of supporters is often a strange and soul less spectacle but it brings with it certain curiositie­s and revelation­s that were once hidden from us by the sound and passion of the choirs that congregate­d there before the pandemic.

Ask anyone who has been fortunate to be allowed into a Premier League game in t his behind-closed-doors era and many will attest that being assailed by yelps of agony and wounded outrage coming from the field of play is one of the defining features of the experience.

It is hard to know sometimes whether you are watching a football match or attending an afternoon session in a medieval torture chamber. The 90 minutes are spattered with the kind of blood-curdling yells, pleadings and protestati­ons that haunt the scenes of slasher movies.

Bruno Fernandes is a wonderful footballer, who has transforme­d Manchester United’s fortunes, but he is also, in my experience of watching these fixtures, a man whose vocal range makes him a prime candidate for a lead role when it comes to reimaginin­g a game of football as a series of excerpts from Scream.

None of this is to say that there are not plenty of legitimate injuries in our game, particular­ly when there is such a high intensity of matches this season. Our Premier League players are fearsome, super-fit athletes and some of the challenges they make, and take, are not for the faint-hearted. Many of them play through pain as a matter of routine.

THE point, though, at the end of a week when death threats were made to referee Mike Dean after he made a disputed and later rescinded decision to show a red card to West Ham’s Tomas Soucek against Fulham, is that the silence of the fans in our empty stadiums has added another level to our understand­ing of the task facing officials as they try to make their judgments.

Most officials will tell you that the animated reactions to even the most innocuous of challenges are nothing new. They were always there. It is just that we can hear them now. And it is not just that we can hear them. The team-mates of a player shouting in pain can hear them, too, where once they would have been oblivious.

Some believe that that has made a referee’s ability to control games even harder. Exaggerate­d and easily audible reactions create an expectatio­n among team- mates that the opponent is going to be punished. If they are not punished, that creates resentment. If they are, it encourages other players to believe they will be rewarded for a similar reaction.

Much of that dynamic was at play when Soucek’s elbow inadverten­tly made light contact with the face of Aleksandar Mitrovic as the two men waited for a free-kick near the end of the goalless draw at Craven Cottage last Saturday. Mitrovic reacted dramatical­ly to the contact and, after consulting VAR and looking at the pitchside monitors, Dean sent Soucek off.

It was the wrong decision. No doubt about that. Many found it baffling. Even more were infuriated by it. So infuriated that some chose to threaten the safety of Dean and his family. Dean was so unsettled by the scale of the online abuse aimed at him that he asked to be excused from officiatin­g a Premier League match this weekend.

Dean made an error. We can all agree on that. Coming on the back of another mistake he made during

Manchester United’s trouncing of Southampto­n a few days earlier when Anthony Martial’s dive fooled him into sending off Jan Bednarek, it made him an easy target.

Sure, if a referee makes a mistake, he deserves some criticism. But isn’t it time that players and their clubs started taking more responsibi­lity for their actions? Isn’t it time for the screaming to stop? Isn’t it time that some players took responsibi­lity for their fellow profession­als and stopped trying to get them dismissed for the wrong reasons?

Reports that Mitrovic had acted as a star witness in the successful attempt to rescind Soucek’s red card may have been true but they provoked bitter amusement rather than admiration. Mitrovic contribute­d to Soucek’s sending-off in the first place and therefore to the subsequent vilificati­on of Mike Dean. It was too late to play the honest broker.

And beyond all of this, there is one other thing worth pointing out. The problem in football is not referees. The problem is us. The problem is the anger and the sense of entitlemen­t that so many fans seem to have built up inside them. The problem is that referees are the most convenient villains.

That’s not new, either, of course. In fact, the irony of the criticism that has been aimed at VAR since its introducti­on is that one of the main reasons it was brought in was to try to protect referees from vitriol when television replays suggested they had made the wrong decision. We created VAR. Now we have to live with it.

The truth is that the hatred and the mockery routinely aimed at referees shames us all. They make mistakes, like all of us, but they do their best. They make mistakes but they do not cheat, nor do they seek to mislead. If more of the people they share a pitch with followed their lead, the game would be better for it.

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