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Socceroos pair at centre of controversy

Roar Rookie
17th May, 2009
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Australians Mark Viduka and Mark Schwarzer were at the centre of a disallowed goal storm as Newcastle’s English Premier League future was left hanging by a thread following their 1-0 defeat against Fulham.

Referee Howard Webb ruled out Newcastle striker Viduka’s second-half header for a foul by Kevin Nolan on Fulham goalkeeper Schwarzer as Fulham moved a step closer to qualifying for next season’s Europa League and left Alan Shearer’s side in dire trouble.

Newcastle’s loss dropped them back into the bottom three thanks to Hull’s draw at Bolton.

It means even a win at Aston Villa in the final match of the season next Sunday might not be enough to extend Newcastle’s 16-year stay in the English top flight.

Shearer accused Webb of being swayed by footage of Newcastle’s first goal in the 3-1 win over Middlesbrough last week where Nolan blocked off defender Matthew Bates at a corner to allow Steven Taylor to score.

He said: “I’m bitterly disappointed about the disallowed goal. I’ve not spoken to the referee yet but I will try him.

“I’ve seen the replay and I can’t see anything wrong with it. Probably what’s happened is the goal Steven Taylor scored on Monday has been highlighted so much, one or two people have thought they might clamp down on it.

“You’re meant to put somebody in front of the keeper at a corner, and I’m not aware that you’re meant to get out of the way. I thought their player was blocking Schwarzer more than Kevin was.

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“I think the referee’s got the big decision wrong here and I think he might think that as well.”

The pivotal incident early in the second-half came shortly after Viduka saw another effort cleared off the line by Dickson Etuhu as Newcastle went in search of an equaliser following Diomansy Kamara’s close-range strike just before the break.

Schwarzer insisted: “I think the referee got the decision right. Their lad was backing into me at the corner.”

Shearer called on Sir Alex Ferguson to do Newcastle a big favour in their efforts to climb out of the bottom three on the final day.

Hull host Ferguson’s Manchester United on Sunday, and the Newcastle boss expects his counterpart to resist the temptation of fielding a weakened side in the wake of clinching their 11th Premier League title, even though they have the Champions League final against Barcelona four days later.

He admitted: “It’s out of our hands now. We have to better Hull next weekend and whatever they do, we’ve got to do better than. It isn’t over and I’m sure there’s going to be a twist or a turn next Sunday.”

On United’s trip to Hull, Shearer added: “Alex has always put out a side that does his club proud.”

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Whether Michael Owen figures next week remains to be seen. Newcastle were again without their injury-prone striker, who has strenuously denied claims he’s set to retire at the end of the season to concentrate on his racehorse stable.

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