The Guardian Australia

Romelu Lukaku could face ban after appearing to kick Brighton’s Bong

- Jamie Jackson and Richard Jolly

Romelu Lukaku could be banned for three games including the Manchester derby for an apparent offthe-ball kick at Brighton amp; Hove Albion’s Gaëtan Bong in Saturday’s 1-0 win, if the incident went unseen by the match officials.

Television pictures appear to show Lukaku kicking Bong at the 66th-minute corner from which Ashley Young’s deflected shot gave United victory.

If the Football Associatio­n establishe­s that the referee, Neil Swarbrick, or his assistants were unaware of it, then Lukaku will be referred to the panel of three former referees who adjudicate retrospect­ive cases.

All three have to agree it is a straight red card for Lukaku to be banned for three matches. If so the striker, who is United’s top scorer with 12 goals in all competitio­ns, would miss Tuesday’s trip to Watford, Saturday’s visit of Arsenal and the Manchester derby on Sundayweek.

Against Brighton Lukaku failed to find the net for the ninth time in 10 matches but José Mourinho insisted he was unconcerne­d. “He didn’t score,” the Manchester United manager said. “I don’t care.” The Portuguese can be a master of deception and diversiona­ry tactics. Sometimes, however out of character it may appear, he is simply voicing an honest opinion.

Because when Lukaku was averaging a goal a game, Mourinho’s mantra was that it did not matter. When his biggest summer signing opened his league account against West Ham, his manager averred that there was “no pressure from me”. After Lukaku struck in the win over his former club Everton, Mourinho said: “He knows that for me there is no pressure for goalscorin­g.” When flood has given way to drought, United’s manager has displayed a consistenc­y of argument.

His demands stretch beyond putting the ball in the net. His talismanic strikers, from Didier Drogba to Diego Costa, have been scorers but also warriors. No one else was named in his evaluation of Lukaku’s display against Brighton on Saturday but there were echoes of his quintessen­tial centre-forwards and an old United attacker alike.

There are recurring themes. Mourinho cherishes a commitment to the collective. He calls for individual­s to subsume themselves to a greater cause. He wants champagne footballer­s to display the work ethic of water carriers. He likes an absence of ego in the way they approach their defensive duties.

Lukaku ticked his boxes. “In the last minute he was fighting and running back like he was in the first minute so I think it is also a mentality question,” his manager said. United’s winner stemmed from a contentiou­s corner. The way Lukaku won it, Mourinho suggested, was “phenomenal”. Much of a penalty-box poacher’s best work came near corner flags at either end of the pitch.

On a day when the left-back claimed the winner – “I think the rule is if it is on target then they give you the benefit of the doubt so I’ll launch an appeal for it to be my goal,” said Ashley Young, whose deflected shot was debited as a Lewis Dunk own goal – the supposed finisher finished up as an auxiliary full-back; it was Mourinho, after all, who turned Samuel Eto’o into an ancillary right-back in Inter’s 2010 Champions League victory.

“The way Romelu ends the game making tackles in the left-back position: that is the mentality I want,” Mourinho said. It brought back memories of the man with whom he traded clubs in the summer. In the days when his energy appeared endless, that used to be Wayne Rooney’s party trick; if many a defender is a frustrated forward, Rooney seemed a wannabe left-back, forever materialis­ing in Patrice Evra’s domain. It was seen as evidence of an irrepressi­ble appetite to be involved.

The former Chelsea and Everton forward Lukaku has not always appeared to be a kindred spirit. He ranked 503rd and last among outfield Premier League players for average distance covered in the 2015-16 season. He used his physical attributes in explosive bursts forward, not frequently tracking back. Yet a player long compared to Drogba may have adopted the approach that once made his childhood hero pivotal for Mourinho at Stamford Bridge.

It is a question of attitude. “And unfortunat­ely not every player is the same,” Mourinho elaborated. “Players are men, men are different. Men are unique cases. Some guys are capable to go into the limits of their efforts and some other guys, even with a lot of talent, they don’t manage to do that, so Romelu for me was fantastic.”The paradox, perhaps, is that Mourinho judges managers, especially those with inferior records to him, on their results, but not forwards on their goal returns. Yet his history validates that line of thought. His success has not been dependent on a striker scoring. His centre-forward has never won the Golden Boot in the seasons when he won the Premier League.

The concept of his strikers taking on new responsibi­lities in deeper roles was also highlighte­d by the sight of Marcus Rashford masqueradi­ng as No10. “Marcus did not have a happy match at all,” said Mourinho. The 20-year-old completed one of his 13 crosses. It almost brought a goal for Lukaku. That could have altered perception­s. But not Mourinho’s: his assessment of Lukaku is not based upon goals.

 ??  ?? Manchester United’s Romelu Lukaku during the win over Brighton. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
Manchester United’s Romelu Lukaku during the win over Brighton. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia