Arsenal boss Arteta fumes after Vardy avoids red card for kicking Mustafi in the head

Arsenal boss Arteta fumes after Vardy avoids red card for kicking Mustafi in the head

Mikel Arteta claimed Jamie Vardy should not have been on the pitch to deny 10-man Arsenal victory over Leicester with a late equaliser at the Emirates.

Arsenal head coach Arteta insisted Vardy should have been dismissed for kicking Shkodran Mustafi in the head as he fell following a first-half challenge between the pair.

Vardy escaped punishment, with the incident seemingly deemed accidental by referee Chris Kavanagh and not reviewed by VAR.

Arteta then saw his own striker, Eddie Nketiah, sent off in the 75th minute for a slightly mistimed challenge on James Justin following a lengthy Stockley Park review and pitchside monitor check from Kavanagh, just four minutes after coming off the bench.

To compound the situation for Arteta and Arsenal Vardy equalised with just six minutes left to cancel out Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang’s first-half opener.

Arteta said: ‘The red card, he [Eddie] cannot see the player and didn’t want to hurt anybody. You have to understand he is a young kid.

‘It can be a red card but Leicester have to play for 10 men after 42 minutes. For one challenge between the 40 and 45 minutes.

‘If we review incidents of that type we review them all. It has to be something equal for everybody because it changes the game for everybody. If Eddie is a red card for sure the other is a red card.’

Rodgers responded, saying: ‘I haven’t seen it [the Vardy incident] to be honest and I didn’t even think about looking at it afterwards.’

On Nketiah’s dismissal, Rodgers said: ‘He was just stretching but it ended up being a horrific challenge. It deserved a red card.

‘It was certainly not intentional but it was dangerous on the stretch. To go in studs up, you see the contact on the knee, the referee made the right decision.’

Arsenal dominated the first half and Arteta said: ‘I’m extremely proud of the team. The way we played, how dominant we were, we should have gone three or four nil up and killed the game. That’s what you have to do when you play good opposition.’

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