Gabriel Martinelli has hit out at Brentford midfielder Christian Norgaard, claiming his tackle could have left him with a broken leg. Norgaard was shown a yellow card for a poor challenge on the forward as he flew forward on the counter-attack in the first half of .
The Brentford captain lunged in from behind to bring down in the 28th minute, but referee Simon Hooper only deemed it worthy of a yellow card. Arsenal manager was frustrated with the decision, which VAR did not intervene on, and told Sport it was “clear” that Norgaard should have been sent off.
The Denmark international was seen apologising to Martinelli in the tunnel at half-time, and while he has forgiven him, the Arsenal star is convinced it was a dangerous tackle which could have ended in a serious injury.
“I didn’t see it again, but in my opinion, in the moment, if my foot was on the floor he could break my leg,” Martinelli told . “He said he didn’t mean it and I believe him, but still he could’ve broken my leg. For me, it was red. I need to see it again to be sure, but for me it was nasty.”
READ MORE:
READ MORE:
Arsenal took the lead when Thomas Partey smashed past Mark Flekken on the counter-attack but were pegged back by Yoane Wissa’s swivel finish. Their 12th draw in 32 games leaves Arsenal 10 points behind , who also have a game in-hand ahead of Sunday’s home fixture against .
“I have to see the action again,” Arteta told beINSPORTS when asked about Norgaard’s challenge. “I’ve seen it on TV, I have a different opinion, but the decision was made. The action is done, I can’t change it.”
Former Premier League midfielder Steve Sidwell said on Sky Sports: “Looking back and seeing the replay, I think if a red card was given you wouldn’t go ‘it’s not a red card’. It’s on that border line where it’s just on the cusp. If it’s not given then you say ‘OK, well there’s no real malice in it to injure and hurt the player’.

“I’ve been there before, where your right leg goes to get the ball and your left leg obviously trails on after, whereas sometimes people go in to do a scissor tackle and take the player down in that motion. I don’t think it was in that case.”
Ex-Liverpool star Jamie Redknapp added: “We know it’s not a pretty tackle – it’s a desperate tackle because Norgaard knows he hasn’t got the pace to match Martinelli. You’re just trying to almost scythe him down, he’s trying to stop him.
“He just lunges and goes in with two feet and he hooks his body round. We don’t see those normally as a red card, so that’s why in this situation I don’t. But is it a dangerous tackle? Yeah, of course it is.”
and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our
You may also like
'This is not about Waqf, it's about politics': Jamiat chief Madani slams new law, Owaisi calls protest on April 19
Full list of 20 electronic items exempted from Trump's tariffs
Kerala CM's constituency becomes first to be declared extreme poverty-free
Monte-Carlo Masters boss addresses hopes of bringing WTA stars to men-only event
Pulkit Samrat says 'Picture abhi baaki hai' as he completes 13 years in the industry