Friday, April 2, 2010
DFB is chasing the bad guy
Frankfurt - It's getting to a miserable automatism: Match for Match Horst Hilpert must deal with the video footage of the weekend. His mission: The DFB chief prosecutor is chasing the bad guy from the Bundesliga.
He must be equal to dealing with an old friend. Hamburg defender Timothee Atouba applies strongly for the title of the meanest Bundesliga players. His victim this time: Albert Streit.
Who got off a blow with his elbow. Not quite abruptly, the dispute had been a trick done in Atoubas soft tissues, even against him, the football-established covenant. "It was yellow, but red Atoubas assault was smooth," said the Frankfurter.
The Hamburger, who was with his wild dancing to the audience favorite, will ligaweit the bogeyman. Last week he rose to Hamit Altintop (kick to the head) and Christian Lell (kung-fu jump against Bayern) a rotverdächtig, the DFB looked upon the punishment.
A lock also threatened the Bremen defender Naldo. The Brazilian had put the Dortmund Tamir Cohen a kick, the referee Peter Sippel had not sanctioned the scene. But the referee had already generous: Multiple BVB increased Professionals brutally especially against Werder director Diego.
It was one of the toughest weekends of the league, piling Brutalo attacks themselves. The call for protection of players is getting louder. Act "vigorously against nasty fouls one must show more often the bright red card, referee calls boss Manfred Amereller.
"But then we all have to stick together: associations, media, referees. Then can not start the howling again, one must run international hardness. The league turns it often as they need it now. "
Since the trainers are in demand. Bochum's Marcel Koller: "We need clear guidelines as. I must have said to my players: that you must go, that you must not do. But that is not so simple. The referee whistled times so-so. "
Hilpert and his committee on Monday and then take on the hunt. Naldo, Atouba and controversy has caught it. You threaten long locks and fines in their clubs.
Atoubas teammate Joris Mathisen is mad about the lack of discipline: "the beginning of last season we had five red cards in seven games. That should not happen again, so we only hurt us. But it seems some have not grasped yet. "