Football has become so bonkers that a player can be booked for taking his shirt off – but escape punishment for cheating in a bid to influence a referee
Harry Maguire was supposed to be one of the last bastions of honesty and decency when it came to footballers deserving of our respect.
But with one cretinous moment – he left his reputation in ruins. Going viral on social media and trending on X is never a good place to be for footballers like Maguire.
It tends to mean the person in question has done something mindless. And so it was that the England and Manchester United defender found himself at the centre of peoples’ attention, in the wake of his decision to claim he’d been kicked in the head during his side’s home win over Crystal Palace.
He then made a bad situation worse, when reacting like he’d been assaulted. The problem was, Jorgen Strand Larsen had never touched him. Not even close. Who’d have thought fresh air could be so dangerous?
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Maguire won a free kick, but not satisfied with his astonishing moment of deception, he remonstrated with the linesman, to complain it had been the second time Larsen had booted him in the bonce.
Having spent time in Maguire’s company while covering England and United, it has to be said he has always come across as a thoroughly likeable chap.
Engaging, polite, helpful and genuine. Which makes his moment of madness even more difficult to fathom. Football has enough liars and cheats in it, without someone like Maguire adding to the numbers.
But how can it be right that someone like Maguire can do something like this – and escape punishment?
How can we find ourselves living in a world in which a footballer can be booked for the heinous crime of removing his shirt, but escape caution for blatant cheating?
Earlier this season, Everton manager David Moyes got booked for celebrating a late goal at Brighton. His offence had been to run onto the pitch. Yet Maguire is allowed to use foul means in a bid to influence a referee, and isn’t punished.
And we wonder why the behaviour of footballers continues to leave right-minded people shaking their heads in despair. Maguire should have been charged with bringing the game into disrepute.
What example is this to set to young supporters, or future generations of players? No doubt Maguire will regret what he did. He will feel embarrassed, if he has the stomach to watch replays of the incident.
But perhaps the most stupid mistake of all he made, was to think he could do what he did without the cameras picking it up and exposing him.
Enhancing the belief that the propensity of footballers to be unimaginably stupid continues to know no bounds.
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