The decisive moment in the match came seconds before half-time when a penalty was awarded after Mehdi Taremi’s flick on from a corner struck Merino on the hand.
It was a decision that perhaps would not have been awarded in the Premier League, with referees having moved away from awarding “soft penalties” from this season onwards.
“We saw some soft penalties last season for handball. So we’re basically looking for examples where it clearly hits the arm unjustifiably, with hands above the head, or away from the body to deliberately block the ball coming into the box or going into goal.”
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That differs from rules in Uefa competitions, and that variation left pundits frustrated on Wednesday.
Former Arsenal defender Martin Keown said on TNT Sports: “Is the arm in an unnatural position? It isn’t. We have that debate again and it is ruining the game.
“It is fine margins, I don’t believe it is a penalty. The unnatural rule, who is making those rules? Have they played the game?”
Ex-Gunners defender Matt Upson added on BBC Radio 5 live: “It does my head in the way they apply that law in Europe.
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“We are miles ahead of that in the Premier League, the referees have the understanding of proximity, the speed of the ball and all those things were tick, tick.
“It is just a bit of common sense.”
As for the incident involving Merino and Sommer at the other end of the pitch, former Arsenal forward Theo Walcott said on Match of the Day: “Merino gets in a good position and [Yann] Sommer comes and physically punches him.
“He’s very unfortunate not to get the penalty and Arsenal were a bit unlucky.”
ASTON VILLA paid the harshest penalty possible after conceding the craziest goal in their 150-year-history to wreck their 100% Champions League record.
Unfortunately Tyrone Mings will never forget his Champions League debut – for all the wrong reasons – after producing one of the biggest gaffes ever seen at this level.
There seemed little to get excited about when Emi Martinez rolled the ball to his big defender at a goal kick.
Until Mings reached down with his left hand, stopped the ball and proceeded to place it at the edge of his six yard box in a moment of madness!
Suddenly all hell broke loose as Brugge’s clued-up players screamed foul and German ref Tobias Stieler agreed and pointed to the spot.
Mings was stunned and protested his innocence along with Martinez.
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But his defence was flimsy because he really should have been aware that Martinez had passed the ball rather than rolled it to him!
Hans Vanaken kept his cool to send Villa’s spot-kick-king the wrong way from the resultant penalty and shell-shocked Villa never recovered.
Unai Emery has taken charge of 190 European ties but he can never have lost one in such bizarre circumstances.
It brought back memories of Gabriel’s let-off for Arsenal against Bayern Munich last season under similar circumstances.
On that occasion the Gunner was given a reprieve because the referee claimed it wasn’t in the spirit of the game to award a penalty.
Unfortunately for Mings and Villa, referee Stieler was a stickler for the letter of the law.
Aston Villa fans spot what Unai Emery did immediately after win over Bayern Munich as they say ‘what a man’
So Villa and their stunned supporters were left to nurse a massive hangover in the beer capital of Europe.
Yet Emery had every right to feel confident as he entered Club Brugge’s atmospheric Jan Breydelstadion on the second anniversary of his first match in charge of Villa.
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Unbeaten in four previous Champions League ties against Belgian opposition, he had won the last three with an aggregate score of 16-0.
Emery led Valencia to a 7-0 win over Genk in 2011 and followed that up with a 9-0 aggregate win when his Paris Saint Germain team steam-rollered Anderlecht in 2017.
That must have had Bruges goalkeeper Simon Mignolet quaking in his boots as he looked to improve on his own miserable Champions League record.
The former Liverpool No.1 had conceded a goal every 46 minutes – the worst ratio of any keeper to play more than 2,500 minutes in the competition.
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Emery even felt confident enough to hand Tyrone Mings a Champions League debut of fire, 15 months after his horror ACL injury at Newcastle.
Unfortunately it backfired on them both so unexpectedly!
It took nine minutes for Villa to threaten when Ollie Watkins collected in space and ran at Brugge’s exposed defence.
But 20-year-old Ecuadorian Joel Ordonez read the danger brilliantly and expertly dispossessed the England striker.
Youri Tielemans was singled out for treatment by the home support throughout, after starting his career with Brugge’s fierce rivals Anderlecht.
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And their jeers turned to ironic cheers when the Belgian international blazed a shot well over from the edge of the penalty area.
Brugge responded with the first shot on target as Maxim De Cuyper tested Emi Martinez following a short free kick.
Then Ordonez just failed to play in striker Ferran Jutgla with a searching through pass which he was inches away from.
Watkins shot inches wide and John McGinn headed well over from seven yards as Villa got back on the front foot.
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But Brugge were growing in confidence and Mings turned back the clock with a brilliant goal line clearance to deflect Casper Nielsen’s netbound header which had beaten Martinez.
Ardon Jashari pounced on the rebound but Martinez recovered to save.
However Villa were living dangerously and came within a fraction of falling behind on the half hour.
Ferran Jutgla’s fierce shot from inside the box was brilliantly touched onto the post by Emi Martinez, who then saved Christos Tzolis’s rebound.
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Villa made it to half-time intact but despite enjoying more than 60% of possession they have ridden their luck at times with Brugge rattling off five shots on target to the visitors’ one.
But their luck ran out seven minutes after the break when they conceded one of the craziest goals ever – from their own goal kick!
Martinez rolled the ball to Mings who picked the ball up and placed it in the corner of the six yard box to presumably take it himself.
But credit the razor-sharp Brugge players who spotted an opportunity and frantically claimed for a penalty for handball.
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German referee Stieler agreed that Mings should have known the ball was in play and penalised Villa’s comeback man who couldn’t believe his misfortune.
Hans Vanaken beat Martinez from the spot and Brugge were ahead in the most bizarre circumstances.
Unai Emery received a lecture from Stieler for his protests and then played his joker as he sent on super sub Jhon Duran for McGinn.
But Brugge were in control and Andreas Skov Olsen fired over as Villa continued to reel from the shock loss of THAT goal!
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Then sub Bjorn Meier squandered a golden opportunity to put the tie beyond Villa as he shot wide from close range with the goal at his mercy.
In truth Villa surrendered with a whimper as they failed to recover from Mings’ moment of madness!
Australian breaker Rachael Gunn has announced she will retire from competition, citing the viral response to her performance at the Paris Olympics.
Gunn – who is known as B-girl Raygun – failed to get on the scoreboard in all three of her competition rounds in August, with a routine that included unorthodox moves, such as the sprinkler and a kangaroo hop.
The 37-year-old university lecturer’s moves catapulted her to global attention and ridicule, spawned conspiracy theories about her qualification, and reignited criticism of breaking’s inclusion in the Olympics.
Gunn had initially planned to keep competing but said the saga had been so “upsetting” that she changed her mind.
“I just didn’t have any control over how people saw me or who I was,” she told local radio station 2DayFM on Wednesday.
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“I was going to keep competing, for sure, but that seems really difficult for me to do now.
“I think the level of scrutiny that’s going to be there, and people will be filming it, and it will go online.”
Gunn received a torrent of violent messages after the Olympics, and was the subject an anonymous petition demanding she apologise. It falsely accused her and her husband of manipulating her selection at the expense of other Australian talent.
She was vigorously defended by Olympic officials, but her performance split opinion within the breaking community, with some saying she made a mockery of the sport.
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It also revived questions over whether breaking – which debuted in Paris but is not on the programme for the 2028 Games in Los Angeles – should have ever been included in the Olympics, due to the creative nature of the genre, which doesn’t necessarily suit organised competition.
Gunn has previously said the backlash took the joy out of the sport for her, which she again alluded to on Wednesday.
“Dancing is so much fun, and it makes you feel good. I don’t think people should feel crap about the way that they dance.
“I still dance, and I still break. But, you know, that’s like in my living room with my partner!”
HUNGRY John Higgins believes a long-awaited 32nd ranking title is on the horizon after he lived to fight another day at the International Championship.
The four-time world champion forced a decider on a re-spotted black before being hauled off for slow play at 5-5 as he secured his quarter-final spot with a dramatic 6-5 win over Lyu Haotian in Nanjing.
Wishaw’s finest turns 50 next year but still has the burning determination that has unquestionably made him an all-time great of the sport.
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Higgins has painfully come up short of success in recent years, with his last ranking crown coming at the 2021 Players Championship.
And the Scot, who lost in the British Open final earlier this season, needs to lift the title this week to qualify for next week’s Champion of Champions.
But he stressed: “I do believe there are titles left in the tank.
“I do think I will be tasting silverware again before I finish. That’s maybe the reason I’m still doing it.
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“You never know what’s around the corner for you. You’ve just got to keep believing, keep putting the work it as much as you can at my age.”
Higgins won the first frame but had to fight back from 3-1 and 5-4 down to send the match to a decider with breaks of 54, 60 and 71.
And after winning the tenth frame on a re-spotted black, Higgins returned in the evening with a cool match-clinching run of 68.
Meanwhile, Judd trump failed to reach a quarter-final for the first time this year as he was stunned 6-4 by maximum man Xu Si.
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World champion Kyren Wilson hit three century breaks to beat Barry Hawkins 6-2.
Watch moment snooker legend John Higgins gets standing ovation for reaching incredible milestone and opponent joins in
Meanwhile, seven-time former world champion Stephen Hendry reckons he could have won a lot more himself – had he ‘reined in’ his attacking instincts.
The 55-year old dominated the game during the 1990s, but ended up going on a SEVEN-YEAR spell without a ranking title between 2005 and 2012.
Hendry said: “Even when me game was on a downward trajectory I still played the same game.
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“I still insisted on going for my shots. I would think it was the right shot and kept going for it and kept missing them.
“If I’d have reined it in in the early to mid noughties I could have had success.
“Whether I’d have won a couple of words titles more I don’t know. But I certainly would have been more competitive for longer.
“The game’s changed. I see people turning down pots that I’d be taking on, but it’s because you get punished if you miss.
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“Back when I first started playing that was my game. I was more aggressive than guys likes Si Jiahui.”
Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page
In the letter – which has been seen by BBC Sport – clubs are told that the proposed changes are also the result of legal advice from a barrister.
One suggested amendment relates to the definition of ‘fair market value’, which is described in the current APT rules as “the amount for which an asset, right or other subject matter of the transaction would be sold, licensed or exchanged, a liability settled, or a service provided, between knowledgeable, willing parties engaging in an arm’s length transaction in normal market conditions”.
In what could be seen as a potential easing of the restrictions, it is proposed that the definition is amended to “the amount for which an asset, right or other subject matter of the transaction could be sold, licensed or exchanged, a liability settled, or a service provided, between knowledgeable, willing parties in an arm’s length transaction”.
If voted through, the softening of “would” to “could”, and the deletion of the words “in normal market conditions” could potentially give clubs more scope to agree commercial deals with associated parties.
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It is also proposed that the exclusion of shareholder loans from APT rules is reversed.
It is unclear whether the suggested amendments will receive the required two-thirds majority to be passed.
Both City and the Premier League declined to comment.
Big East preseason player of the year Ryan Kalkbrenner scored a career-high 49 points and 15th-ranked Creighton needed just about every one of them in a season-opening 99-86 win over UT-Rio Grande Valley on Wednesday night.
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Creighton, a Sweet 16 team three of the last four seasons, couldn’t shake off the Vaqueros of the Southland Conference until the final two minutes.
The 7-foot-1 Kalkbrenner’s point total was the second-highest in program history behind Bob Portman’s 51 against UW-Milwaukee in 1967. The fifth-year center was an astonishing 20 of 22 from the field, including 2 for 2 on 3-pointers, and he made 7 of 8 free throws. He also grabbed 11 rebounds and blocked three shots.
Hasan Abdul-Hakim had 24 points and Cliff Davis and DK Thorn added 17 apiece for the Vaqueros (0-2), who were within 87-82 when Howie Fleming Jr. made a fifth-chance basket with 2:37 left.
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Takeaways
UT Rio Grande Valley: The Vaqueros kept it close by going 14 of 35 on 3-pointers and outworking Creighton on the boards in the second half. They finished with 19 second-chance points. They dropped to 0-14 against Top 25 opponents and have lost 56 straight against power-conference opponents, according to Sportradar.
Creighton: The Bluejays were 30-point favorites, according to BetMGM Sportsbook, and got more than they bargained for against the Vaqueros. Coach Greg McDermott was forced to play his starters until the final minute.
Ryan Kalkbrenner drops a 49-point double-double in Creighton’s 99-86 win over UTRGV
Key moment
Kalkbrenner scored 10 straight points in a variety of ways in the first half. He made a free throw, hit a 3 from the wing, dunked a lob from Jamiya Neal, beat the player guarding him downcourt for a fast-break layup and showed some post moves for an easy bucket.
Key stat
Creighton won its 30th straight home opener, a streak that started in 1995.
Up next
Creighton hosts Fairleigh Dickinson on Sunday in the second of four home games over 11 days. UT-Rio Grande Valley returns home to play Champion Christian College on Sunday.
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