Why is Kevin Muscat a protected species?

13 January 2010 | 13:00 - By Jesse Fink

Something must be done to pull the 'Man-Eater of Etihad Stadium' into line, writes Jesse Fink.

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When it comes to punishing Kevin Muscat, the sanction rarely matches the offence [GETTY]

One of my favourite writers, indeed one of my all-time heroes, was the Indian hunter-conservationist Jim Corbett, author of the Man Eaters of Kumaon and the Man-Eating Leopard of Rudraprayag, classic hunting stories from the twilight years of the Raj.

Corbett was by profession a soldier and railway worker, but was the man the villagers of Garhwal and Kumaon turned to when a giant cat – usually a tiger – needed to be taken down and killed.

These so-called "man eaters" became thus when they stopped hunting their usual quarry because of old age, unhealed injuries, gum disease or a broken tooth and started knocking off humans.

One tiger, the Man-Eater of Champawat, was reputed to have devoured 436 people before Corbett shot him in 1911. By the time he left India for Africa in 1947, Corbett had killed 33 big cats.

So he was responsible for the sad fates of some fine animals, but it was necessary work. Corbett died in Kenya in 1955.

When I see Kevin Muscat take the field these days, I see a player who could be considered football's equivalent of a man-eater.

Past his prime. Getting old. Slow. And resorting to things he might at one time have never countenanced to stamp his authority on a game.

Last weekend Muscat's team, Melbourne Victory, played Newcastle Jets in Newcastle. It was second place versus fourth, a clash of two of the best attack-minded, open-styled sides in the A-League.

But within just 18 minutes, Muscat, the Man-Eater of Etihad Stadium, had flown at his opposing captain, Matt Thompson, with a flying karate kick to the guts.



Referee Matthew Breeze saw it and raced up to Muscat, giving him a stern lecture right in his face. Nose to nose. Surely this was going to be a red card.

But no.

Breeze reached for his top pocket and out the came the yellow. A reprieve. Yet another one in a catalogue of unfathomable let offs in the career of Kevin Muscat.

And the man had the hide to complain!

If Jim Corbett had been a football referee Muscat wouldn't have had enough life in him to open his mouth.

What is it about Muscat that makes him such a protected species in the A-League? It's been a conspiracy theory in football circles for years and first it was easy to laugh it off as just fanciful thinking but it appears the guy gets away with an awful lot of offences that other players would pay for dearly.

Take his punch into the ribs of Terry McFlynn in the 2005 season:



Or his clear stomping of a prostrate Daniel Mullen in the 65th minute of the second leg of the major semi-final in February last year:



Breeze was also the referee for both those games. The punch got a yellow. The stomp wasn't even considered worthy of a card.

It's preposterous. Punching and kicking are red-card offences ("violent conduct") by Law 12 of the Laws of the Game but too often in the A-League, and especially when it comes to the Man-Eater of Etihad Stadium, the sanction (even if it gets to be deemed such) rarely matches the offence.

It's time not only to come down hard on Muscat but to bring the A-League's referees to account for their bewildering decisions, like Breeze's yellow carding of Muscat in Newcastle.

Even Corbett had the jungles under better control than the FFA has the A-League.


:: For more Fink musings on the big issues in football, check out Half-time Orange on The World Game.

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27 Jan 2011 20:22 AEST

Culminatr

From: Adelaide

Great Letter

This has got to rank as one of the BEST letters I read. 100% true!!!!

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08 Oct 2010 14:08 AEST

Wolves

From: Rowville

Kevin Muscat

Many players are competitive, just like Muscat. But he's absolutely feral on the field. Kicking, punching, gouging and spitting. Makes no difference to him. Nor the damage he's caused to other players. Muscat is in a league of his own. His period in England was spent in a spiral descent from one level of dirty play to the next. Little wonder that he was despised there, as here. At least, when he's not allowed to play overseas, Australia's reputation isn't t tarnished by his aggression.

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06 Feb 2010 19:18 AEST

Leo

From: Adelaide

Muscat

The sooner a sniper sneaks into a Melbourne game the better

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02 Feb 2010 13:10 AEST

Steve

From: Newcastle

Muscat the Motor Mouth Grub

Muscat has always been one to dish it out,the guy is a blockhead with manure for brains.Can't understand how he was not sanctioned for kicking Matt Thompson in the stomach.Yep protected but maybe a wind of change with the latest suspension.The real test will be the appeal.

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19 Jan 2010 15:49 AEST

Pedrito

From: Brisbane

Muscat

The A-League will struggle to improve its image with the likes of Muscat running around and stomping people on a weekly basis. I can't stand the sight of him and found it hard to support the Socceroos when they kept selecting him, anyone remember the 'friendly' against France, I'm sure Robert Pires does. He was hounded out of the UK for his repeated and vicious attacks on opponents and if he wasn't on a sports field, would be in jail for assault.

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19 Jan 2010 11:37 AEST

mitch

From: newcastle

muscat

Muscat is a grub, end of story

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19 Jan 2010 8:15 AEST

Cristian

From: Brisbane

We should send of referee's not Muscat

Muscat and others should not be allowed to "get away with it". The problem appears to be the standard of our referee's. Muscat and others would kerb their ways if the games were administered by quality referees. It is no coincidence for mine that Breeze is implicated in each of these video's. I have been at many games he has referee'd and at times wanted to leave due to his obvious incompetence.

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17 Jan 2010 13:37 AEST

Val

From: Sydnay

Muskat issue

all bellow is true, but real issue is 'REF' Players will foul play as ref will let them. we should be talking our refs and FFA why it allow to go with dirty play after so called post game video checking or whoever it is called.

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15 Jan 2010 9:20 AEST

Jimmy

From: Werribee

Spot on Frank of Garwhal

Well said Frank! Muscat has gotten type cast as the 'rough man' similar to how Australia had in WC2006 and recieving extra special treatment. As for JC and the Adelaide bunch. We've heard it all before

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14 Jan 2010 18:04 AEST

Mick

From: Adelaide

Musty Rat

Everyone knows that Muscat is let off all the time by Breeze. Maybe it's time the teams that have been on the receiving end of his 'talents' wrote to the FFA to complain about Breeze's leniency toward him. If nothing else it might persuade them to assign a different ref to Victory games, which might give Kev second thoughts about how he carries on.

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About this Blog

The Finktank is more of what you've come to expect from Jesse Fink, The World Game's enfant terrible, but with a bent on the big issues in sport. No sport, no personality, no subject, is off limits. 

Jesse Fink Jesse Fink is one of Australia's most popular football writers and sports columnists. He is the author of the book 15 Days in June: How Australia Became a Football Nation (Hardie Grant, $29.95) and writes twice a week as "Half-Time Orange" for The World Game and weekly for ESPN Star Sports in Singapore. He lives in Sydney.

 
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