ROBIN VAN Persie has fuelled the controversy surrounding Uefa’s decision to overturn their two-match ban on the Arsenal striker Eduardo da Silva by admitting he himself exaggerates contact in order to convince referees that a foul has been committed in the penalty area.
European football’s governing body was forced to perform an embarrassing U-turn having initially found Eduardo guilty of “deceiving the referee” after scrutinising TV footage of his tumble under a challenge from Artur Boruc during Arsenal’s Champions League qualifying tie against Celtic.
It prompted a two-game suspension yet, while Arsene Wenger subsequently suggested his player had “made more” of the contact than was wise, the club’s appeal was upheld last week after Arsenal proved that Eduardo had indeed been touched.
Van Persie has now muddied the waters between perceived gamesmanship and cheating by conceding that, while he never consciously dives, he does overreact at times when contact is made in the penalty area.
“Yes, I have done that,” said the Dutch international when asked if he had ever exaggerated upon being touched.
“Sometimes when you are in the middle of an ‘action’ and you get a little push, and you know there’s nothing more to take. Basically, the guy pushed you and finished the whole action.
“Then you’re in the right to show, in a way, to the referee that you’ve been pushed. Know what I mean?
“That’s not really diving. It’s just saying: ‘Come on, he just pushed me, so I can’t score now’. You sometimes make a little movement with your arms or with your body, yeah. But I don’t think that’s really cheating. I never have the intention to dive. Just to play honest football. I am against divers.
“It is just not honest, but it is difficult. But sometimes you are knocked off balance a bit and it looks a bit funny.
“For example at Manchester United, after the whole Eduardo thing, I had the ball on the right side and I cut it back. (Patrice) Evra gave me a little push – a really little one – but it sort of over-balanced me. I just fell down and the whole stadium started to boo me. I was like: ‘Come on, can’t you see he pushed me?’ ”
Van Persie will lead the line for Arsenal at Fulham this evening hoping to reverse the team’s recent away form, which saw them beaten at United and Manchester City on successive trips despite impressing for long periods in each game.
The Dutchman has yet to receive an apology from Emmanuel Adebayor for the rake of Van Persie’s face at Eastlands, which earned the Togolese a three-match ban. “I don’t expect one, not any more,” he said. “What can I say about that? He didn’t apologise on the pitch, no.
“I don’t really want to speak about this case any more. I made a statement after the game which were my feelings and still are. I don’t want to waste any more time on Mr Adebayor, basically, because I think he has showed how he is in the last couple of weeks. So he had to do what he did. If you look at the Arsenal players, if you look at myself – if I look in the mirror, I don’t think that I can blame myself on any action. He was punished for what he did and I think that’s the main thing. What he did wasn’t really right.”
Arsenal have done plenty wrong on recent visits to Craven Cottage, losing two of their last three trips across the capital, and, having succumbed twice already in the league this term, they can ill afford a third reverse so early in the campaign. Van Persie has stressed the team cannot point to any inexperience within their ranks as a justification for inconsistent form.
“I don’t think we can hide behind that anymore,” added the forward. “Yes, we have players in their early and mid-20s, and some younger, but a lot of them played 50 games for Arsenal last season and we have experienced players at the back.
“That’s not the problem. It’s just about how much we really want it. I look at my own performances and still think I should score more goals. I’ve been missing too many chances lately, so that’s something I have to work on.
“We can all look at our own games and be honest with ourselves. That way we can all improve.”
- Guardian Service