Manchester City midfielder Nigel De Jong dropped by Holland for tackle on Ben Arfa

04 October 2010 13:19
De Jong went in hard on Newcastle's France winger during the Premier League clash at Eastlands, with tests later in the day revealing Ben Arfa had suffered a broken tibia and fibula to his left leg. [LNB]Holland coach Bert van Marwijk had already expressed his concern at the tackle earlier in the day and a statement this lunchtime revealed the extent of his dismay. [LNB]The statement read: "I just informed the squad and told them I saw no other possibility. [LNB]"In the near future I will discuss this matter with Nigel but right now we have to focus on the upcoming two matches."[LNB]Van Marwijk described De Jong's challenge as "wild and unnecessary" in an interview - even though match referee Martin Atkinson did not even award a foul at the time in a match City went on to win 2-1. [LNB]"I've seen the pictures back," Van Marwijk said in the Algemeen Dagblad newspaper. [LNB]"It was a wild and unnecessary offence. He went in much too hard. [LNB]"It is unfortunate, especially since he does not need to do it. [LNB]"The funny thing is that the referee did not even show a yellow card for it. Apparently, there are other standards. [LNB]"But I have a problem with the way Nigel needlessly looks to push the limit. I am going to speak to him." [LNB]It is not the first time the 25-year-old has come under the microscope for his aggressive play, having caused Bolton's United States midfielder Stuart Holden a fractured right fibula on international duty in March and then got away with a chest-high challenge on Spain's Xabi Alonso in the World Cup final. [LNB]De Jong was last week named in Van Marwijk's Holland squad for the upcoming Euro 2012 qualifiers against Moldova and Sweden. [LNB]The World Cup runners-up, who picked up six points from their opening two Group E qualifiers against San Marino and Finland last month, take on Moldova in Chisinau on Oct 8 and Sweden four days later at the Amsterdam ArenA.[LNB][LNB]

Source: Telegraph