OLIVER HOLT: Don’t blame Aston Villa’s Ollie Watkins for giving it back to a moron who thinks he can abuse a player for 90 minutes with impunity
- The forward has been unfairly maligned for standing his ground at BrentfordĀ
- PLUS: Marco Silva tries to deflect Fulham defeat with tried-and-tested criticismĀ
- It’s extraordinary how people behave in football stadiumsā¦ champion Ollie Watkins for what he did to dish it out to the fans – Listen to It’s All Kicking Off
There were five minutes to go at Brentfordās Gtech Community Stadium on Sunday when Ollie Watkins, one of English footballās stand-out players this season, leapt high to meet a Boubacar Kamara flick-on from a corner and directed his header into the net.
The goal earned a 2-1 victory that lifted his Aston Villa team, briefly, to second place in the Premier League and the momentum of his jump carried Watkins towards the goal. Surrounded by celebrating teammates, he stood there for a few moments, roaring in delight, his hands on his hips in a defiant, triumphant stance.
Before he turned away, Watkins, a former Brentford player, pointed towards one of the home supporters at that end, an unseen figure out of the camera shot and nodded his head. Brentfordās Saman Ghoddos then shoved Watkins, and all hell broke loose.
By the time the match finished, both teams had had a player sent off, 10 players had been booked and both managers had been cautioned. Some pundits blamed Watkinsā behaviour as the catalyst and said it was an unacceptable way to celebrate a goal.
Maybe I am in a minority but I donāt think Watkins did anything wrong. Nothing at all. It emerged after the match that the fan he had been pointing at had been baiting him throughout the match and screaming foul abuse about his family. Watkins wanted to ram some of that abuse back down his throat.
Ollie Watkins singled out a supporter in the crowd at Brentford after scoring his goal for 2-1
It later emerged that they had been screaming foul abuse at the Aston Villa star throughout
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Do you blame him? I donāt. Like most football players, on most match-days, Watkins was actually remarkably restrained in the face of persistent provocation. He did not leap over the advertising hoardings to confront the fan. He did not attempt to emulate Eric Cantona. He made his point peacefully.
You would have thought from the reaction of some that Watkins had leapt the barriers or that he had made obscene gestures towards the supporter or that he had sworn at him. There was none of that. Again, Watkins was remarkably restrained.
This is not, sadly, an unfamiliar dynamic. Abuse at football is always presumed to be a one-way street. It is accepted that abusing visiting players is part of the match-day experience but if the players so much as look at a fan the wrong way, supporters, and pundits, get a collective fit of the vapors.
Players suffer the most egregious insults from the stands, insults that would get you arrested or beaten up if you shouted them in the street, and then are castigated if they react. They are accused, then, of inciting violence because they have inflamed the passions of the crowd. Which is risible.
Many years ago, I recall something similar happening with another Aston Villa player, Mark Bosnich. The goalkeeper was baited by opposition fans throughout a match. At one point, he turned to the supporters and feinted, jokingly, to throw the ball at them. He was reported to the police.
Tempers frayed after Aston Villa’s decided at the GTech Community Stadium on SundayĀ
Watkins was blamed by some for sparking the conflict but Oliver Holt doesn’t think he did anything wrong
By the end of the match both sides were down to 10 players and managers had been warned
On Match of the Day 2 on Sunday night, the former Arsenal and England forward Ian Wright alluded to that happening to him, too, in the past. āThereās a certain amount of people who complain and then police will come to the dressing room,ā Wright said. āThat must have happened to me five or six times.ā
Alan Shearer supported Watkins, too. āItās his right of reply,ā he said simply. And he was right. Watkins, too, was, quite correctly, unrepentant. āIf he said those things to me again,ā Watkins said, āIād do it again.ā
The fault does not belong to the player who reacts. The fault belongs to those who have baited and mocked him for 90 minutes ā sometimes in the most unpleasant and upsetting ways – and somehow expect that they should be protected by the unwritten rule that a player is an object, not a human being with feelings.
If Watkins did the same again, Iād back him again. All the way. He did absolutely nothing wrong. As for the fans who are criticising him for what he did, they need to grow up. They need to realise that you cannot act like a moron with total impunity. If you canāt take it, donāt dish it out.
Arteta’s charm sees charge disintegrateĀ
The FAās case against Mikel Arteta for the abuse he aimed at match officiating after Arsenalās defeat to Newcastle last month became, inevitably, bogged down in tedious and laughable linguistic argument about what the Arsenal manager really meant when he called disputed decisions a ādisgraceā.
Arteta clarified his comment and the Independent Regulatory Commission was charmed by him. He was called an āimpressive witnessā. They just about stopped short of saying āhas he fragranceā but his exoneration was permission for those who abuse referees at all levels of the game to carry on ranting.
Mikel Arteta seemed to have charmed the Independent Regulatory Commission after he received an FA charge
Sir Kenny’s a worthy winnerĀ
I have not watched the BBC Sports Personality of the Year show for some time but it is heartening to see that they have got at least one thing right this year by honouring Sir Kenny Dalglish with a Lifetime Achievement Award.Ā
As he is for so many others, Dalglish is a hero of mine because of the sublime player that he was and because of the strength and support he provided, and continues to provide, for the families of those who lost loved ones in the tragedy at Hillsborough in 1989.Ā
Dalglish was a brilliant footballer, one of the greatest that these isles have ever produced, and he is an even better person. He never won the BBC Sports Personality of the Year award itself. He was way too good for that.Ā
Kenny Dalglish (centre, in 1981) is a worthy winner of a BBC Lifetime Achievement Award
Pressure builds on Howe after Champions League exitĀ
Eddie Howe has done a fine job at Newcastle United but the manner of the clubās exit from the Champions League last week has put him under pressure.Ā
Newcastleās failure even to make the Europa League, a competition they would have had a good chance of winning, means Howe has to get Newcastle back into the top four to prevent the club going backwards.Ā
The emergence of Spurs and Aston Villa as challengers for the Champions League spots has complicated that task. For all Howeās fine work, if Newcastle fail to take their place among Europeās elite again next season, his Saudi paymasters may decide itās time for a change.
Silva’s bid to deflect will not washĀ
Fulham manager Marco Silva took the tried and tested route after a defeat on Saturday and criticised the referee in order to camouflage his teamās failings.Ā
Silva was upset after his teamās 3-0 defeat to Newcastle United because referee Sam Barrott sent off Raul Jimenez for a bizarre challenge on Sean Longstaff that started off as a flying kick and ended as a milder version of Harald Schumacherās notorious challenge on Patrick Battiston at the 1982 World Cup.Ā
Marco Silva took the tried and tested route of criticising the referee after Fulham’s defeat
IT’S ALL KICKING OFF!Ā
It’s All Kicking OffĀ is an exciting new podcast from Mail Sport that promises a different take on Premier League football, launching with a preview show today and every week this season.
It is available on MailOnline, Mail+, YouTube , Apple Music and Spotify
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Jimenez had to go. It was an obvious straight red. And yet Silva aimed scathing criticism at Barrott. He said the referee couldnāt handle the pressure.Ā
Actually, it was Silva who couldnāt handle the pressure.
Odd one outĀ
I turned up for the Dunfermline parkrun in the beautiful surrounds of Pittencrieff Park on Saturday morning.Ā
It was a bitter morning but as a hundred or more of us gathered by the statue of Andrew Carnegie before the start, I noticed I had unwittingly revealed myself as an Englishman. I was the only one wearing a woolly hat.Ā
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