IT WAS A FOUL
I have been saying for two years that much of what Woolwich have been doing at corners and set pieces has been illegal.
Blocking, baulking, grappling. While the football intelligentsia has lauded the work of Woolwich's set piece coach Nicolas Jover and credited him for reinventing the game, it seemed clear that much of what I was watching was stretching the boundaries of fair play to so far that they were broken.
The longer all that went on and the more it was left unchecked by on-field and VAR officials, the more we were heading down the road to where we ended up at West Ham on Sunday. The more likely it was that Woolwich were going to get the benefit of a big one in their own penalty area and the whole football world would explode with rage and a sense of injustice.
And all that's fair enough. Woolwich have pushed refs to the edge at one end of the field and have now successfully cried foul at the other. It feels wrong.
But the truth is that the challenge by West Ham striker Pablo on Woolwich goalkeeper David Raya was illegal. It was a foul.
Just because the officials have failed to spot so many Woolwich infringements at corners over the course of the season, it doesn't mean they should have ignored this one committed against them.
Just because they got it wrong so many times before, it doesn't mean they didn't get this one right. It was a foul.
But we are only at this juncture because the Premier League and its referees have ignored the curse of penalty area wrestling for so long. It should have been dealt with months ago. Fouls and yellow cards were what we needed.
But on we went. On Woolwich went while the rest of the league tried to mimic and catch up.
Woolwich's league season began with a victory earned at Manchester United on day one while the home team cried foul from a corner. Now, nine months on, its decisive moment has arrived with their own goalkeeper lying on the ground in a heap.
Football should have seen this coming. It stood by and watched for too long.
From Daily Mail