Sentences with phrase «penalty decision which»

An entertaining first half ended with a penalty decision which bewildered many onlookers, but on the replays it looked clear that Bastian Schweinsteiger had used his hand to intercept the ball as it came into the box.
Norwich manager Daniel Farke has claimed that Arsenal players apologised to him for a penalty decision which wasn't given in their League Cup tie on Tuesday night.

Not exact matches

Gorsuch's commitments to interpreting the law as «the words on the paper say» and not over-criminalizing innocent conduct were on full display in a 2015 decision in which he used «plain old grade school grammar» to determine the legal penalties imposed on defendants accused of using a firearm «during and in relation to any crime of violence of drug trafficking crime.»
And the way the film interprets that particular text makes that biblical verse directly related to the governor of Illinois» recent decision to ban the death penalty, a decision which was reportedly informed by the Bible.
This is not just a logical nicety but an important protection of the freedom of association — a freedom that has been safeguarded in decisions like NAACP v. Alabama (357 U.S. 449, 1958), which held that a state may not compel a voluntary association of citizens to turn over its list of members because that might subject them to governmental penalties.
The High Court had granted the Commonwealth of Australia special leave to appeal the decision in Director, Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2015] FCAFC 59 (1 May 2015), in which the Full Federal Court concluded that they should not have any regard to the figures agreed by the parties in relation to penalties.
Unconscionable conduct (agrees with NFF that they have not provided protection and support reforms «to provide transparency in the supply chain» and recognise that «certain classes of suppliers... are predisposed to suffering from a special disadvantage...»; misuse of market power (legal framework must «level the balance of market power in negotiations...», «ensure transparency in the transmission of market prices» and «not allow for final market risks to be borne by the primary producer» and provide «transparency of contract processes» - specifically, Canegrowers supports effects test and a process giving ACCC greater power to «regulate anti-competitive behaviour and impose penalties», shifting «the decisions framework from the judicial system to a regulatory system» which would make it more accessible to small producers); collective bargaining (notes limits of Sugar Industry Act (Qld); authorisation and notification approval costly and limited and not a viable alternative - peak bodies should be able to «commence and progress collective bargaining with mills on behalf of their members» and current threshold too restrictive)» competitive neutrality (mixed outcomes - perverse outcomes in the case of natural monopolies - suggest remove «application of competitive neutrality provisions to natural monopoly essential services»)
The decision for the penalty for West brom was a joke and even Chelsea penalty which Hazard bought was clearly not a penalty.
Arsene Wenger had a more realistic approach to the penalty decision however, although he is known for his own biased rants about decision which he feels could have helped his side on occasion.
Good article states many reasonable conclusions and facts about the season and how amongst all the turmoil we have a manger who does well but one thing in purchases over the last five years we are 6th in the epl were at 366m tottenham in 5th with 397m and he made a mistake there we are 6thin money spent on players but we have had the sanchez saga and new players adjusting to epl and the team and injuries and it definitely hasnt been our year in ref decisions which have played a factor in games though we still should have won aside from ref but watford and westbrom many other games are included at city free offside goal weak penalty and at spurs we were robbed of going one nil up auba onside bu honestly the officiating across the whole league this year has been an embarrassment to professional officials of all sports its been bad game after game they need to get some rigorous training this offseason for improvement
Shocking defending by Arsenal but AW claims Arsenal robbed by Referee's bad decisions which resulted in Palace being awarded two penalties.
I agree about them not getting the decision in the second half, but Giroud should have won a penalty, you know just before we got that free kick which Sanchez hit against the wall.
The penalty was not the only decision which angered Wenger however, with the Citizens closing the game out at 3 - 1 thanks to a goal which clearly looked offside, and replays proved there was in fact two players behind the last defender at the time the ball was played, including the receiver.
There has been talk of Arsenal being hard - done by, and even Graham Poll claimed that the penalty decision was wrong, but Mark Clattenburg has studied the footage and insists there was in fact contact which resulted in bringing Richarlison to the ground.
I think we need a radical approach to CHEATING my approach would eliminate it very quickly.When dubious decisions are taken which leads to a goal being scored from the resulting penalty or free kick and a player is sent off wrongly and the result goes against the team who have been penalised, when the review panel examine these issues clearly sees that the decision was the wrong one the the goal should be disallowed and the result should be reversed.But there is no one who has what it takes to introduce this ruling.Pity.
How can a team which just months ago cheated Georgia with a blatant hand ball, and the referee having given one of the most curious penalty decisions in history, then complain about anybody not respecting the integrity of the game?
An animated Buffon was shown the red card by English referee Michael Oliver after protesting a penalty decision made with only a handful of seconds remaining of a quarterfinal tie which, with Juve leading 3 - 0, was heading to extra time.
(ed: this was the game in which Graham Poll came close to being lynched after sending off Ray Parlour for two bookables and handing the game to Newcastle late on with a disgraceful penalty decision; it still makes my blood boil thinking about it).
It was a tense game which turned into somewhat controversial especially after a penalty decision awarded for Juve which was converted by Carlos Tevez on 27 minutes.
Following a rapid start in which Jets striker O'Donovan received a red card, the home side took the lead close to half time following a controversial penalty decision that former Sydney FC player Dimi Petratos converted.
The decision was taken in light of Swansea's 2 - 1 defeat at home to Liverpool, a game in which they had led before losing courtesy of a James Milner penalty.
There was debate about most of the penalty decisions by referee Jon Moss, not least the one which saw Fazio dismissed on his league debut for a foul on Aguero.
We made that decision which he took and then probably he didn't want to repeat, because of the second penalty a couple of minutes later and Martial was the one who had the previous action.
The unjust penalty decision lifted the crowd who roared into action which in turn transmitted to the players on the pitch.
It was a brilliant performance and a fantastic match which had it all - goals, two penalties, contentious decisions and a red card.
The Potters were so good last weekend against Liverpool that they didn't even need a couple of stonewall penalties, as once again Stoke were on the receiving end of some terrible referring decisions which, had they not of beaten the Reds, would have surely ended in Tony Pulis going back on his word by not slamming ref's and doing just that.
«In real time this was a difficult series of decisions, which the match officials judged correctly in recognising that Kane was not offside, as Lovren had deliberately played the ball, and he was fouled for the award of the penalty kick.
He was sentenced to two years in prison and ordered to pay $ 280,000 in restitution, but the penalty was stayed pending a much - anticipated US Supreme Court decision involving the «honest services» section of the federal mail - fraud law under which he was tried.
The story referred to a Bill introduced into the Commons by Lib Dem MP Andrew George to water down government legislation (known in Whitehall as the under - occupancy penalty) which had represented a collective decision of the coalition government.
Poor procurement decisions and a failure to comply with procurement legislation could result in legal challenges from suppliers, contracts being cancelled and financial penalties which can be costly, time - consuming and impact on your school's reputation.
The CRTC released a compliance and enforcement decision, CRTC 2016 - 428, October 26, 2016 in which it found that Blackstone Learning Corp. (Blackstone) committed nine violations of paragraph 6 (1)(a) of Canada's Anti-Spam Legislation (CASL) by sending commercial electronic messages (CEMs) without consent, and imposed an administrative monetary penalty of $ 50,000 on Blackstone.
Rather than applying the ordinary meaning to plain language and seeking to uphold the democratic decision of the voters who elected the Mayor, by construing the MCIA «strictly» and by searching for a «reasonable interpretation which will avoid a penalty,» Hackland RSJ did the opposite of what the law demands,» write Ford's lawyers.
The Ontario Divisional Court has overturned a decision of the Financial Services Tribunal in which the Tribunal revoked a mortgage brokers license because the Tribunal failed to give sufficient consideration to lesser penalties before revoking the license.
The technical legal arguments may be impeccable but for many the decision will offend against common sense and be detrimental in freeing women of the «motherhood penalty» exemplified in the gender pay gaps which large employers were this month obliged to publish.
As a justice, McDonald joined in two decisions eliminating the last vestiges of the death penalty, which had been repealed by the legislature for future crimes.
The research findings from The Veritas 2017 GDPR Report, which surveyed more than 900 senior business decision makers in 2017 across Europe, the U.S. and Asia Pacific, also found that more than 20 per cent (21 %) are very worried about potential layoffs, fearing that staff reductions may be an inevitable outcome as a result of financial penalties incurred as a result of GDPR compliance failures.
There are policies now available, though they are rare, that allow for «commutation» which enables you to reverse your decision and collect a lump sum, but this process is normally expensive and involves paying stiff penalty fees.
The Ontario Divisional Court has overturned a decision of the Financial Services Tribunal in which the tribunal revoked a mortgage broker's license because the tribunal failed to give sufficient consideration to lesser penalties before revoking the license.
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