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PGMOL shifting the conversation is so cynical

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Sami Mokbel, Daily Mail

It is hard to know where to start, really. The real take away from this remarkable afternoon at Molineux should be that Arsenal aren’t giving up on their title hopes without a fight. They courageously answered some big questions here.

But, then again, it’s impossible to overlook what was simply the most ludicrous decision from referee Michael Oliver to award Arsenal left-back Myles Lewis-Skelly a straight red card for one of the softest challenges you will ever see on a football pitch.

Mikel Arteta was charitable in his post-match press briefing, winning had clearly taken the sting out of the injustice. You can only imagine how the Arsenal manager would have reacted here had his team not emerged victorious against Wolves - who were also reduced to 10 men by Oliver - thanks to Ricardo Calafiori’s second half winner.

A decision that will earn immediate entry into the refereeing hall of shame.

Dreadful. Pathetic. Abysmal.

The fact VAR then proceeded to affirm the call merely adds to the shame of it all.

So with all that said, fair play to Arsenal for having the wherewithal to drag themselves through, though they have - in part - Wolves midfielder Joao Gomes to thank for that after the Brazilian committed to challenge, while on a yellow card, that he should never have got involved in.

And all this after a largely uneventful opening. Plenty guts, little glory for both teams during the early exchanges.

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Yet all of that paled into insignificance in the 43rd minute when Oliver inexplicably reached into his top pocket to brandish a straight red card.

To put it mildly, Arsenal were livid at a decision that was so far out of sync with the scale of the offence that your first thought was that Oliver had inadvertently pulled out the wrong card.

But no. Oliver thought this trip on Matt Doherty, who was deep inside Wolves own half, was worthy of a red card.

Did Lewis-Skelly deny Wolves a clear goalscoring opportunity? No.

Wolves were breaking as they cleared an Arsenal set piece - but they were deep inside their own half.

The eventual confirmation from VAR indicated that the red card was awarded for serious foul play. If Lewis-Skelly’s challenge, if you can even call it that, represents an act of serious foul play then this game is finished.

‘Michael Oliver, it’s all about you,’ screamed the travelling fans. They weren’t prepared to let this one lie. Understandable, perhaps, when you consider that Oliver has now sent eight Arsenal players off during his career, the most of any club.

You’ll do well to see a decision as bad as this one this season or in the next 10 seasons for that matter.

No that the home fans were particularly concerned by the injustice. Wolves need all the help they can get if they are to successfully avoid the drop.

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Wolves, in the circumstances, knew they only had themselves to blame. Or, more pertinently, who was to blame. Gomes will find this difficult to swallow. You’d imagine his head coach Vitor Pereira will have his say behind closed doors.

Hwang missed a good opportunity during he closing stages, denied by David Raya when clean through during a tense finale.

But in the end, Arsenal won. Wolves lost. Oliver was also a loser.

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Mokbel also gives players ratings and under it he writes:

Referee: Michael Oliver 2/10

Sami Mokbel is clearly getting a call first thing in the morning.

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