Fines, the Premier League reaches 1 million pounds / The discipline of the teams in England turns into chaos, here is which team holds the first place

So much has been said about the "Respect" campaign, but in England it has started to look more like the "Anarchy" campaign. Because Premier League clubs are approaching the £1m fine for matchday indiscipline before the Christmas decorations are put up.
And this is the clearest possible signal that the behavior of the teams is going in the wrong direction, even in a country with the sporting culture of England. Not only are players and coaches losing their grip, but assistants, sporting directors and even an owner have ended up on the list of people penalized by the FA this season, Nottingham Forest's Evangelos Marianakis.
And with the busiest part of the entire season kicking off next month, clubs face 12 games in just five weeks in various competitions. The FA should probably hire more staff for its penalty department to cover absences during the holidays.
FINES ARE NOT ENOUGH – Apparently, in order to control the behavior of the protagonists on the pitch, fines are proving to be an increasingly ineffective means of controlling tempers. Almost every week we have another financial penalty or FA misconduct charge, with the Premier League's current total standing at £917,500 so far this season.
The biggest single fine imposed so far was the £125,000 Nottingham Forest were ordered to pay following the row caused by Neko Williams' push on Chelsea's Mark Kukurje in the final days of October at Stamford Bridge. Kukureja pushed at Blues coach Enco Mareska, leading to a brawl involving the benches and players.
The brawl also cost Chelsea a £90,000 fine, half of which was after the Blues received six yellow cards from referee Kris Kavanaugh. The game against Nottingham Forest was the second of three games in which Chelsea received six penalties this season, costing them £150,000 in total. There have been 14 instances of clubs receiving six or more bookings in a match, with Bournemouth and Manchester United both guilty on two occasions, with each offense adding a further £25,000 to the standard fine./Panorama.al
Happening now...
America may withdraw from Europe, but not from SPAK
ideas
Who is the Surrel Rabbit?
The two wrong paths of the opposition with the Ombudsman
top
Alfa recipes
TRENDING 
services
- POLICE129
- STREET POLICE126
- AMBULANCE112
- FIREFIGHTER128


