Igor Tudor has been charged with misconduct by the Soccer Affiliation following feedback he made about referee Thomas Bramall after Tottenham’s 2-1 Premier League defeat at Fulham on March 1.
The FA mentioned Tudor “allegedly acted in an improper method throughout a post-match interview by making feedback that indicate bias and/or query integrity and/or are personally offensive in relation to a match official.” He has till Monday to answer the cost.
The Croatian head coach had been incensed by Fulham’s opening aim, which got here after what he believed was a push by Raul Jimenez on Radu Dragusin earlier than Harry Wilson put the ball into the web.
Talking after the match, Tudor made no effort to disguise his frustration. “I didn’t just like the referee right this moment, an excessive amount of of a house group referee. I didn’t really feel nicely with him. All the selections had been on their facet. He doesn’t perceive soccer, the sensation of what’s mistaken and what’s proper.
“He was not enthusiastic about the ball, he was considering the right way to cheat, he cheated the participant, was pushing, it was dishonest and it’s a foul. Ninety-nine of 100 folks will say it’s a foul, it’s so apparent.”
Wilson’s aim was allowed to face following a VAR test by Craig Pawson. The choice drew additional scrutiny on condition that Spurs had an analogous effort dominated out the earlier week of their 4-1 loss to Arsenal, the place Randal Kolo Muani was penalised for a foul on Gabriel.
The Fulham defeat was Tudor’s second recreation in cost following the sacking of Thomas Frank and prolonged Tottenham’s winless league run to 10 video games.
Two additional defeats adopted, together with a calamitous 5-2 Champions League first-leg loss at Atletico Madrid, which led to hypothesis that Tudor himself could possibly be changed earlier than he had been within the job a month.
With eight league video games remaining, Spurs sit sixteenth, one level above the relegation zone. Having spent all however one season within the high flight since 1978, it has been estimated that relegation to the Championship may value the membership greater than £250m.



























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