Wenger demands ban for divers

Arsene Wenger wants zero tolerance shown to divers

Nick Howson
Published 16/04/2012 13:47 by Nick Howson, read by 3,880 people.

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger wants The Football Association to brandish three-game bans for players caught diving.

The Frenchman's comments come after Ashley Young won a penalty for a second consecutive week in controversial fashion, appearing to throw himself to the ground under minimal contact from Aston Villa's Ciaran Clark.

With simulation firmly in the spotlight again, Wenger is urging The FA to punish those who dive retrospectively.

"If an obvious dive is punished by a three-match ban, the players would not do it anymore," he said. "I would support it. It has to be obvious diving.

"Ashley Young for example against QPR I would not suspend him because I don't know if he has lost his balance. He has made more of it for sure to get the penalty. This is not an obvious case for me.

"Everybody wants to win football games and when you have played football, you always try to be on the fringe if you want to win. For example, you touch the ball and it goes out you shout: 'throw in for us'. Things like that.

"But with a dive in the box, sometimes I think you can only get it out after the game. I think that the foreign players have brought good and bad things. But I must say the English players learn quickly.

"It's impossible to judge today penalties. Penalties and offsides are the main problems for the referees. All the rest you have to give to them. Especially on penalties. For example the dives. Or you say everybody who dives now and is caught after the game is suspended for three games.

"But you have a double obstacle, first of all when the situation has been assessed by the referee, you cannot come back on the judgement of the referee, so it's better you give him video help. We have that famous thing that the judgement of the referee has to be final. But I don't agree with that.

"We should have a superior committee of ethics who could still punish a player like that. Because you go home and you think he now gets away without being suspended and the whole situation doesn't make sense."

Ex-Arsenal striker Eduardo saw a two-match ban for diving against Celtic in 2009 overturned after what Wenger called a 'witch-hunt' against his player at the time.

The English Premier League saw an upturn in simulation following the influx of foreign players, however the habit has since become common among home-grown players as well, with Wayne Rooney having been previously reprimanded for diving.

While The FA have spent much of the weekend fielding questions over their policy over goal-line technology, it's yet to be seen whether they will act on Wenger's words.

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