Rudiger on the rampage, rugby tackles and Rice vs Bellingham — breaking down the chaos at the Bernabeu


It was never going to be humdrum and quiet, was it?

Not when the stakes are this high, with one club so desperate and the other so resolute. On Wednesday evening, Arsenal marched into the semi-final of the Champions League, and although they were stilted stylistically, their opponents Real Madrid refused to go gently.

Both sides sides tugged, pulled, tackled and pushed — scarcely has a goalless first half ever brought such a glut of controversial decisions. The referee Francois Letexier spent more time on the screen than Declan Rice, Rodrygo, and Antonio Rudiger combined.

So while Arsenal may have comfortably progressed after a 2-1 win on the night, securing a 5-1 triumph on aggregate, several head-scratching passages of play (and some off-pitch very much non-play) require further attention.

We’ve analysed the quarter-final second leg’s most contentious moments…


Real Madrid had been openly speaking of the notion of a Remontada — a miraculous comeback from the brink of elimination — but their night was closer to beginning with a red card than a mood-altering goal.

David Alaba went straight through Bukayo Saka after four minutes — seemingly envisaged as a statement of intent, but one which was late and clearly demonstrated excessive force.

The 32-year-old Austria international was late and out of control, and the incident felt more serious than the yellow he received. But without direct contact from Alaba’s studs, and after just four minutes, Letexier was always unlikely to give a red.

Letexier’s next significant decision came out of the blue after 13 minutes. Only Mikel Merino seriously appealed when the Arsenal forward was hauled down in the Real Madrid area during a corner kick, his Arsenal teammates merely dropping back into their own half to deal with Thibaut Courtois’ clearance.

Then came the video assistant referee (VAR) into Letexier’s ear — recommending he consult the pitch-side monitor. This is what it showed.

Merino and Raul Asencio both grab each other’s arms, like wrestlers preparing for a high-school bout. Merino fakes to step inside and moves to Asencio’s outside…

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…where he grabs Asencio’s left arm. He appears to initiate contact. But as Merino spins away, Asencio’s arm stretches to grab his countryman around the waist like a rugby tackle.

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Merino goes down. After a three-minute delay, Letexier gives a penalty after consulting the monitor. A Madrid supporter might argue that Merino initiated contact and fouled Asencio first. An Arsenal sympathiser would say that Merino’s grab was intended to toss away Asencio’s grasping arm — and while he did not impede Asencio’s movement, the arm around his own waist did.

But when Saka missed the resulting penalty, his attempted panenka batted away by Courtois, it left the tie alive.

 

Ten minutes later, Rice was marking Kylian Mbappe in the Arsenal box — and the France forward ended up on the floor. There was no indecision from Letexier here. Penalty to Real Madrid. Arsenal were incensed.

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Their frustration was compounded by a yellow card being shown to Rice, which would have ruled him out of the first leg of the semi-final should they qualify. It would also have meant the midfielder was walking a tightrope for the remaining hour of this match.

Rice argued intently with his England team-mate Jude Bellingham, the two gesticulating inches from each other’s faces.

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The VAR began to look at the incident — taking four minutes to decide whether Letexier should consult the screen. Mbappe was narrowly onside from Asencio’s flick-on, which appeared to be heading out for a goal kick.

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Rice’s arms were loosely around his opponent’s torso — and as Mbappe begins to sprint for the ball, he feels the touch on his chest and goes down. However, it appears clear that Rice’s intervention has not forced Mbappe to the floor — he has gone down of his own volition.

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Letexier is sent to the screen. On British broadcaster TNT Sports, the pundit and former Champions League winner Rio Ferdinand expresses his opinion that it is not a penalty — but that in slow-motion, these challenges look more deliberate. After awarding Arsenal a soft penalty minutes earlier, he is concerned that the referee may feel a precedent has been set, and decide there is not enough evidence to overturn his original verdict.

After another minute of looking, Letexier makes his decision — no penalty, and no yellow card. Mbappe is not booked for a dive.

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“I knew it wasn’t a penalty,” Rice told TNT Sports after the match. “Don’t get me wrong, I had my arm around him, but you have to do that in the box. You have to try and stop him, you aren’t just going to let him go.

“I’m an honest guy, and I said to him (Mbappe) and I said to (Lucas) Vazquez as well, that I would admit it if I pulled him down. But he just fell to the floor and I was fully confident it would get overturned.”

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