Jamie Carragher has given his verdict after Xavi Simons' tackle on Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk, which saw the Tottenham player sent-off during their Premier League showdown.
Liverpool legend Jamie Carragher has claimed it's hard to argue against Xavi Simons receiving a red card for his challenge on Virgil van Dijk. However, the Sky Sports pundit believes there was a different challenge that should have seen another Tottenham player sent-off this weekend.
Analysing Simons' tackle on Liverpool's captain, van Dijk, Carragher told Monday Night Football: "When I saw it at normal speed I didn't think it was a red card, but then you slow it down and it looks horrific, but I think everything does slowed down.
"But I've got a little bit of sympathy for Simons. And the reason I say this, and we are going to slow it down a lot now, and maybe that makes the tackle look a lot worse, but when I've been a player, the only thing I can think he's trying to do is, Virgil van Dijk's maybe going to go back to his goalkeeper, and you know sometimes when there's such a big difference in the size and power and you're trying to leave one on somebody, almost knock them off the ball.
"I just want to really look at his eyes - look at the way his arms are going. He's looking at the top of Virgil van Dijk; I actually think he's just clumsy and he doesn't realise where his feet are going.
"I think he thinks; 'I'm gonna leave one on him.' We've all done that and give him a bit of a whack, maybe knock him over and give a foul. And look at his arms the way they come up now, to almost give a shove to him.
"Now I know the tackle will look horrific because it's really slowed down, but his arms are there to go; 'I'm gonna give van Dijk a bit of a knock on the back'. And I almost think he's not even aware of where his foot is going, and he's just caught him on the back.
"When you see it there, it looks horrific and you can't almost say it's not a red card when you look at it like that - but I'm trying to put myself in his head and think what he was thinking and that thing of like, we've all done it as players where you think; 'I'll just give someone a shoulder barge'.
"But because of the difference in size is so big, he's almost overdone it and he's just got clumsy where his foot has gone. But when you look at that as a still [image], it looks horrific."
When asked if VAR should have stuck with the referee's original call of a yellow card, Carragher added: "Listen, I can't say it's not a red card, but if you're asking me would I rather that be a red card or [Rodrigo] Bentancur's challenge on [Milos] Kerkez, it would be Bentancur's challenge on Kerkez in the second-half every day of the week."
Although Arne Slot will be happy with three points away from home, the Dutchman won't be impressed with injury concerns surrounding Alexander Isak. The £125m signing was unable to celebrate after scoring following a rough challenge by Micky van de Ven. The Spurs defender was not shown a card for his tackle, which forced Isak off the pitch, but ex-pro Jay Bothroyd believes there should have been harsher punishment.
He explained on Sky Sports show Ref Watch: "Van de Ven has not intentionally tried to hurt Isak. Obviously, he's desperate to stop a goal and he's coming across to stop the shot.
"This is an example where, yes, Isak has scored, but this should still be a red card. He's lunging, he's going into him. Every explanation you want to give for a red-card challenge is there. Because he's scored, they've let it go.
"He's lunged, he's out of control. He's trying to make a block, but he's never going to get there. If that happened in the middle of the park, that's a red card."