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2025-01-23
A frustrated Leicester City boss Steve Cooper confirmed he will write to the PGMOL after his side's 2-1 loss to Chelsea. Cooper also bit his tongue when discussing referee Andy Madley's performance to avoid getting into further trouble. The Foxes boss was adamant his side should have had a penalty in the second half when Chelsea defender Levi Colwill looked to have brought down Stephy Mavididi . However, Madley did not award it and VAR opted not to intervene. Leicester did have a penalty in second half stoppage time when Bobby De Cordova-Reid was fouled by Romeo Lavia , although it took a VAR review to get there. Leigh Doughty, who began the game as fourth official but took over linesman duties from Mark Scholes at half-time after the latter picked up an injury , initially flagged Reid to be offside. But replays showed the Leicester forward was clearly onside as Madley was told to award a penalty. Speaking to talkSPORT's Sam Matterface after the contest, Cooper, who was booked by Madley for his protests in the second half, conceded he felt the club had to take extreme measures to get the PGMOL's attention after the official's performance. "I think the club needs to, and they will, they will to be fair because I'm not saying that we're not, but in this moment we have got to officially write things or pick up the phone and go, 'Come on, what's going on here,'" Cooper told talkSPORT. "The last thing the PGMOL needed this week is things like that. It's no good for anybody. "Sometimes, they can go for you and against you. But it's the last thing they need in the first Premier League game after the international break. "Everybody is talking more about the decisions than the actual game, which is always a good indicator of how the game's been refereed. Cooper added: "We had him (Madley) at Palace as well for the VAR. "I won't say anything that's going to get me into trouble. But we've had some bad luck with him this year. That's all I'll say on it." Madley was indeed the VAR when Leicester and Crystal Palace met in the fourth game of the Premier League season. Palace striker Jean-Philippe Mateta scored a 92nd-minute equaliser from the spot to rescue his side from 2-0 down as the contest ended 2-2. However, Cooper was left furious over Mateta's first goal as it was initially flagged for offside, only for VAR to overturn the decision and award it. But Cooper believed VAR had used the wrong freeze-frame to decide whether Mateta was off-side as images shared on social media proved the Foxes boss was right to be angry. Leicester met with the PGMOL two days after but it was explained to them no human error was made and the correct frame was used to decide whether Mateta was off-side or not. However, Cooper held nothing back during his press conference in the days after. "We're over it now, it was an awful human error that we believe has been hidden a little bit," Cooper said. "We have seen different images that show he clearly was offside, but unfortunately they froze it at the wrong time and he was deemed to be onside. Everything that has been seen has been a false image. "On Monday we showed the Premier League with clear footage that actually the game was stopped at the wrong time. "Decisions go against you whether it's in-game or VAR and we've had a massive error go against us. We don't want it to go under the radar because I don't think that's right for the players or for the supporters. "Errors like that shouldn't happen and it's why we're changing to the semi-automated system. We felt very let down by it. We needed to stand up for the club and tell the Premier League what we thought."New York State education initiative to expand learning opportunities draws fire on Long IslandRed Sox need help at catcher after Danny Jansen reportedly signs with Raysforebet

Colorado QB Shedeur Sanders escapes injury after questionable low hitNew Delhi, Nov 23 (PTI) Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday hailed the BJP-led alliance's sweeping victory in Maharashtra as popular endorsement of its governance model and rejection of the Congress' "lies and deceit", as he accused the Gandhi family of spreading the "poison of casteism and divisiveness". Buoyed by the NDA's unprecedented scale of win in the politically prized state, Modi flayed the Congress for "betraying" the Constitution's secular principals and cited the Waqf Act, which his government is seeking to amend, as an example of its "appeasement politics". The Congress has tried to inflict capital punishment on true secularism, he claimed, asserting that the Waqf law has no place in the Constitution. Reiterating his call for "ek hain to safe hain" (we are safe if united), he said this is the biggest message from Maharashtra after the Haryana polls and it has become the country's "mahamantra". It is becoming increasingly difficult for the Congress to come to power on its own, he said, dubbing the opposition party as parasitic. The Congress and its allies tried to divide people with lies and deceits, he said in an apparent reference to their claim of threat to the Constitution from the BJP, a plank which harmed the ruling party in the Lok Sabha polls in a few states, but were rejected. The Congress' priority is only family, he said in a swipe at the party's Gandhi family and not people of the country. The royal family is now spreading the poison of casteism, he added. A family's hunger for power has gone up so much that it has eaten up the party, he said, claiming that fire of disaffection is surging with the Congress as many of its own leaders no longer identify with its existing values. When it comes to good governance, people trust only the BJP, he said, noting that the party has also put up an impressive show in the bypolls held across the country. It is a historic stamp on the BJP's governance model, he said. "Development, good governance and true social justice have won. Lies, deceit, divisive forces, negative politics and nepotism have suffered a big defeat," he said of the Maharashtra poll results. People have preferred stability and the state has broken all records in its support of the BJP-led alliance, he added. In a swipe at the longtime BJP ally-turned-bitter rival Uddhav Thackeray, who heads a Shiv Sena faction, he said the leaders who resorted to betrayal and tried to create instability have been roundly rejected by people. He said the Congress allied with Uddhav Thackeray but the party and its leaders could not speak in support of the policies of his father Bal Thackeray, a leading Hindtutva voice of his time. With the Delhi Assembly polls round the corner, Modi highlighted the popular support for the BJP in major cities in many states and emphasised on his party's agenda for making Indian cities among the best in the world. His government has been working to boost urban infrastructure by launching new metro trains, highways and electric buses, he said, describing cities as engines of development that also strengthens villages. The urban region's support to the BJP is a message for modern India and a rejection of those putting obstacles in its development, said Modi. Urban India wants ease of living and it trusts the BJP, he added. The prime minister noted that Maharashtra has become the sixth state where people have elected the BJP to power for a third straight term, stressing that it underscores people's truth in its good governance model. The BJP-led alliance had won a majority in the 2019 assembly polls in Maharashtra but its then ally Thackeray joined hands with the opposition to form government, which fell in 2022, paving the way for the saffron party to power as it allied with the faction headed by Eknath Shinde, who became the chief minister. "The Congress and its ecosystem had thought that by spreading lies in the name of the Constitution, they could divide the Scheduled Castes (SCs), Scheduled Tribes (STs) and Other Backward Classes (OBC) in small groups. This is a solid slap on their faces," said Modi. The Congress and its allies have failed to grasp the changed realities of the country's mood, as voters do not want instability and believe in "nation first" and not in those preferring "kursi first". The voters in Maharashtra also evaluated the Congress on the basis of the false promises made in other states like Karnataka, Telangana and Himachal Pradesh, he added. "Neither their false promises nor their dangerous agenda worked in Maharashtra," Modi said. The prime minister said the Maharashtra election also shows that only one Constitution will work in India and that was given to the people of the country by B R Ambedkar. The Congress and its allies were again trying to create a wall of Article 370 of the Constitution in Jammu and Kashmir, he said. "I want to say this to the Congress and its allies that no force in the world can bring back Article 370 and insult our Constitution," Modi said. His party has respected the country's values and traditions, and India will now advance with the mantra of "vikas aur virasat" (development and heritage), Modi said. The Congress, he said, has been stoking divides in the name of region and caste, and that its espousal of urban naxalism has become a challenge for the country. The remote control of this urban naxalism is outside the country, he said. (This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)

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