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SportFootball
Peter Simpson

Home and AwayIf the Premier League was the Wild West, referee Mike Dean would be the sheriff

Grappling, holding, dissent and diving are all being closely watched early in the season, with penalties and cards flowing in a bid to keep the game clean

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Referee Mike Dean shows a yellow card to Manchester City's Raheem Sterling. Photo: Reuters

Imagine, if you will, referee Mike Dean cast in the role of Seth Bullock, the fearless sheriff who brought law and order to the Wild West hit TV show, Deadwood.

Dean is tasked to bring to heel the Premier League’s lawless penalty boxes – territories rife in all manner of skulduggery.

Into the anarchy he rides, armed with a couple of (red and yellow) cards, the letter of the law and the full backing of the townsfolk, aka the supporters.

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Such was the plot during last weekend’s clashes in the must-watch 2016-17 English Premier League series.

Dean tenaciously fought the destabilising forces that ruin football – the grappling and holding, the boorish and spoilt-brat dissent, and the pathetic diving.

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During the showdown between Manchester City and Stoke, he awarded penalties to both teams for grappling in the area.

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