EPL: Arsene Wenger Blasts 'Weak' Referee, Says Diego Costa Should Have Been Sent-off
It was a heated London derby between Chelsea and Arsenal as Diego Coasta provoked Gabriel Paulista, resulting in the Arsenal centre-back getting red carded. Arsenal coach Arsene Wenger has accused the referee of being weak.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: September 19, 2015 09:21 PM IST
Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger accused referee Mike Dean of "weakness" for failing to send off Chelsea striker Diego Costa during his side's 2-0 defeat at Stamford Bridge on Saturday. (Diego Costa Sparks Controversy As Chelsea Defeat Arsenal)
Costa clashed with both Arsenal centre-backs late in the second half, twice lashing out at Laurent Koscielny with his hand and then exchanging words with Gabriel. (Latest Football News)
After Costa and Gabriel were both booked, the Arsenal man was sent off for kicking out at the Chelsea striker, but Wenger felt that Costa should have been dismissed for his role as instigator.
"I would not like to be Mike Dean tonight," Wenger told BT Sport. "Costa should have been sent off. He hits him (Koscielny) in the face on purpose.
"In every game he has aggravation and he gets away with it because of the weakness of the referee.
"We knew before the game he is only looking at that. Gabriel should not have responded at all, but the two sending-offs for us and Costa staying on the pitch is a shame."
Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho refused to be drawn on Gabriel's dismissal, but praised Costa for his performance.
"I don't have a view on the sending off," said the Portuguese. "Man of the match for sure was Diego Costa. He brought everything to the game."
Arsenal finished the match with nine men after Santi Cazorla was shown a second yellow card for sliding in on Cesc Fabregas in the 78th minute.
Kurt Zouma headed Chelsea in front from Fabregas's free-kick early in the second half and Eden Hazard added a second goal with a deflected shot in the 89th minute.
- 'Terry is my man' -
The result gave Chelsea, the defending Premier League champions, a first home win of the campaign, after a return of four points from five games that represented their worst start to a league season in 29 years.
"It was a good victory. We need to win matches," added Mourinho, whose side opened their Champions League campaign with a 4-0 home win over Maccabi Tel Aviv on Wednesday.
"We won twice in three days, we kept two clean sheets. We controlled the matches."
Mourinho also defended his decision to include Zouma in place of John Terry, his captain.
Asked if he had felt the need to explain himself to Terry, Mourinho replied: "No. John Terry doesn't need me to speak with him because he knows what I feel, what I think.
"He knows the relation. He knows that he is my man. He knows that if I have to choose one out of 25 (players) to be my man, he is the first. He knows that I care about him as a person, as a player.
"He knows that nothing is (at) risk. He knows that my decision had only one intention, which was to help my team to win the match.
"I thought that Arsenal would play a defensive game with a very fast striker that gets behind people.
"To play against Theo Walcott, the best player we have is Zouma."