Advertisement
Advertisement
English Premier League
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Manchester United's Swedish striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic (right) clashes with Bournemouth's English defender Tyrone Mings during their Premier League game last weekend. Photo: AFP

Manchester United’s Ibrahimovic banned for three games

Old Trafford striker to miss the FA Cup quarter-final clash at Chelsea and two Premier League matches after accepting a charge of violent conduct at last weekend’s stormy 1-1 league draw with Bournemouth

Manchester United striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic will miss the FA Cup quarter-final at Chelsea after accepting a charge of violent conduct and an immediate three-match ban, England’s Football Association said on Tuesday.

As well as Monday’s FA Cup clash, the 35-year-old Ibrahimovic - United’s leading scorer this season with 26 goals - will also miss the Premier League matches against Middlesbrough and West Bromwich Albion.

Ibrahimovic and Bournemouth defender Tyrone Mings were charged on Monday following two incidents in Saturday’s bad-tempered 1-1 league draw.

Mings appeared to deliberately stamp on Ibrahimovic’s head as he jumped over him late in the first half at Old Trafford and the Swedish striker seemed to retaliate moments later by elbowing the defender in the head.

Both players would ordinarily have been facing three-game bans but the FA took the unusual step of saying on Monday that in the case of Mings the standard punishment was “clearly insufficient”.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic will miss three games for Manchester United.

Bournemouth have until 2am HK time on Wednesday to decide whether to contest the charge against Mings.

On Saturday match referee Kevin Friend spoke to Ibrahimovic, who had already been booked, following his elbow on Mings, but neither player was cautioned.

As a result, the incident was referred to a panel of three former elite referees, who unanimously concluded that both offences merited red cards.

Ibrahimovic denied elbowing Mings on purpose, saying after the game: “I jump up and jump high and he jumps into my elbow. It is not my intention to hurt someone.”

Mings, whose conduct was widely criticised by a number of former players turned football pundits, said he had not intentionally stamped on Ibrahimovic’s head.

“I would never do that. That’s not in my game,” he said. “Hard and fair is how I like to tackle, but off-the-ball stuff like that isn’t part of my game.”

At the very least, Mings now stands to miss league matches against West Ham, Swansea and Southampton.

Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Bournemouth's Tyrone Mings have a chat with referee Kevin Friend. Photo: Reuters
Post