Real Madrid midfielder Jude Bellingham has been suspended for two games for “disrespect” to the referee who sent him off at Osasuna, but avoided a longer ban for swearing at the official.
Bellingham was shown a straight red card in the first half of Real Madrid’s 1-1 draw with Osasuna on Saturday, the latest moment of controversy the club feel they have come up against in recent weeks.
Manager Carlo Ancelotti claimed after the game the referee had accused Bellingham of shouting “f*** you” over a decision he disagreed with, but that the 21-year-old had actually said “f*** off”.
The England midfielder faced a potential ban of up to 12 matches under the Spanish FA’s regulations, but will be suspended for only two matches as well as facing a potential fine after the governing body deemed Bellingham demonstrated a “disrespectful/inconsiderate” attitude towards the referee.
Earlier this month, Real Madrid wrote a formal letter to the Spanish FA after a 1-0 defeat by Espanyol, with the winner scored by Carlos Romero – who Real felt should have already been sent off for a late challenge on Kylian Mbappe.
The club was also left incensed by a VAR-awarded penalty given to arch-rivals Atletico Madrid which saw the Madrid derby end in a 1-1 draw a week later.
“I already gave my opinion on what happened and is still happening,” Ancelotti explained ahead of Wednesday’s game with Man City when asked about his latest thoughts on the state of refereeing in Spain.
“What’s happening is quite surprising and I have nothing else to say.
“We’re obviously not happy with it, with what happened against Osasuna, what happened against Atletico. It’s been three games where we have been harmed by some decisions that we still don’t understand. I don’t understand.”
Istvan Kovacs, who refereed last season’s Europa League final between Bayer Leverkusen and Atalanta, will officiate Wednesday’s match at the Bernabeu, with Real leading 3-2 from the first leg in Manchester.
When Ancelotti was asked about the difference he was expecting from a European referee, he praised the standard of refereeing around Europe and aimed another dig at Real’s domestic officials, saying: “The statistics speak for themselves. There are fewer VAR interventions, only when it’s necessary.”
Pep Guardiola has suggested City only have a “one-per-cent chance” of going through, now needing to win either by two clear goals – or on penalties if they win by one – in the Spanish capital, where Real have not lost since a shock group-phase defeat by Milan.
Ancelotti questioned Guardiola’s gamesmanship when the comments were put to him, and jokingly suggested he would bring them up with his opposite number ahead of the latest game between the two teams, the eighth in four seasons.
He said: “I’ll ask him tomorrow, before the game – do you really think you have just a one per cent chance? Of course, it is more than that – and we don’t think it is 99 per cent of the possibility to go through.
“We have a small advantage which we have to take advantage of. We’ll try to play the same game we did in the first leg, and things worked out pretty well there.”
Analysis: Why are Real Madrid engulfed in a refereeing dispute?
Sky Sports News’ Ben Ransom in Madrid:
It’s the story which is swirling around Real Madrid. This relationship they have with referees, LaLiga and the authorities in Spain. It’s something which was brought into sharp focus for our media once Jude Bellingham was sent off at the weekend for foul and abusive language towards a match official. That carries with it a punishment of up to 12 matches.
He has come out since and said there was a misunderstanding, there’s a feeling within Real Madrid he can explain away what was said and that it wasn’t directed at the referee.
But it goes back to last month and a game between Real Madrid and Espanyol. Real lost that 1-0, the goalscorer Carlos Romero scored late on, but Real felt he should’ve been sent off earlier on because of a bad tackle on Kylian Mbappe.
They were upset with the officials’ decision both on the pitch and VAR as well.
They followed that up by writing a letter to the Spanish authorities, calling into question the integrity of the referees in LaLiga.
Since then, the head of LaLiga, Javier Tebas has hit back at Real Madrid, a subsequent match which Real drew 1-1 with Atletico Madrid brought a penalty for Atleti which got them back into the tie.
Ancelotti referenced that today as well in terms of VAR intervention, and said there were many decisions they simply don’t understand.
It was really interesting, the final question of the press conference asked whether Ancelotti felt the letter to the authorities was having a negative effect on decisions. They’ve been knocked off the top of LaLiga, but Ancelotti said he didn’t want to talk about it and left at that point.
So much of the focus has been on that particular relationship, and from their point of view perhaps they’re happy the glare of the media spotlight will be Europe-wide with a European referee, and Ancelotti didn’t hold back in suggesting that was a better standard.
Valverde makes U-turn on press conference comments
Sky Sports News’ Ben Ransom in Madrid:
A really bizarre situation. The Real Madrid captain has felt the need to apologise to the fans this afternoon because he did not criticise referees today at the press conference.
“I’ve always said that I am no one to judge a referee that is doing his job,” said Federico Valverde ahead of the game.
“We are all humans and we can make mistakes. Referees are criticised and when they do things well, we never flatter them.”
Valverde then made a post, addressing the fans directly, going back on what he said during the press conference in a bizarre twist after facing backlash from the supporters.
He is doubling down about their viewpoints, as did Ancelotti, regarding the refereeing.
Probably half or three-quarters of the questions posed to Ancelotti were specifically on the issue of refereeing, which tells you about the scale and size of the issue whipping around Madrid ahead of their crucial Champions League tie on Wednesday.