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July 7, 2020

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Ref row brews as Real nears title

The closer Real Madrid gets to the Spanish league title, the stronger the accusations it is benefiting from the referees.

Its opponents are not holding back, and Real has heard enough.

“I am tired of always talking about the same thing,” Real coach Zinedine Zidane said after the 1-0 win at Athletic Bilbao on Sunday. “It seems like we only win thanks to the referees, and that’s not true. Real Madrid and its players deserve respect.”

The victory kept Real as the only team with a perfect record since the restart. It was the team’s seventh straight win since the league resumed, leaving it four points ahead of second-place Barcelona with four matches left.

When asked if Real was in the lead only thanks to video assistance referee, Barcelona President Josep Bartomeu didn’t do much to dismiss the insinuation.

“Our results haven’t been good, obviously, but it’s true that in many games VAR hasn’t been fair and has always favored one team,” Bartomeu said after his team’s 4-1 win at Villarreal later on Sunday. “Many teams are being hurt by this.”

Real’s win over Bilbao came with a controversial 73rd-minute penalty awarded by video review after left back Marcelo was stepped on by a defender inside the area.

It was the latest in a series of VAR decisions that have gone Real’s way following the break caused by the novel coronavirus pandemic.

Real had another one moments after it scored on Sunday, as Sergio Ramos stepped on a Bilbao player away from the ball inside the area but the referee let the game continue despite loud complaints from the hosts.

“We have already noticed which way these decisions are going in these last few rounds,” Bilbao captain Iker Muniain suggested. “Everyone can reach their own conclusions.”

Barcelona’s players and coach Quique Setien had already been sending messages of criticism against some of the decisions going Real’s way, but it was the first time Bartomeu spoke more bluntly about it.

“This is the best league in the world but VAR is not working as it should be working,” Bartomeu said. “In the last few weeks everyone has seen that VAR has not really been fair.”

Barcelona had the lead when the league was interrupted, but relinquished it after drawing three of its last seven matches.

“If someone has made a mistake and has not achieved his goals, he has to have some self-criticism and look at his own players and at his own squad,” Ramos said before Bartomeu’s comments. “You can’t give credit to the referees for what Real has been achieving.”

Atletico Madrid coach Diego Simeone, however, was not among those thinking Real has been getting the benefit of the doubt on VAR decisions.

“Mistakes can be made, but VAR is fair with everyone,” the Argentine said. “A team like Real will have more penalties go its way because it attacks more than other teams do.”

Atletico is 15 points behind Real, which resumes its quest for its first league title in three years when it hosts relegation-threatened Alaves on Friday. Barcelona hosts last-place Espanyol tomorrow in a Barcelona city derby.

Wu Lei’s Espanyol was left on the brink of being relegated from La Liga for the first time in 27 years after it was beaten 0-1 at home by fellow struggler Leganes on Sunday.

Jonathan Silva struck the only goal for the visitors early in the second half, controlling a long ball and entering the box unmarked to lash past Espanyol goalkeeper Diego Lopez.

Espanyol, which has been in the top flight since winning promotion in 1994, is on 24 points after 34 games. It is 11 points adrift of the safety zone.




 

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