Rangers star accused of cheating by ex-PGMOL chief as footage re-analysed

Mohamed Diomande was lucky to go without punishment after calls were waved away for a Rangers penalty against Motherwell.

Despite a positive start to proceedings at Fir Park on Saturday, 2 August, with James Tavernier scoring the Gers’ opener from a corner, Russell Martin’s side were forced to settle for a single point.

Emmanuel Longelo netted just three minutes from full-time, with several Motherwell players going close to scoring the winner, but the Light Blues held on in their opening game of the Scottish Premiership.

The manager was extremely honest with the verdict on his team’s performance, calling out several first-team stars for “jogging”, suggesting that multiple changes still need to be made this summer.

Mohamed Diomande involved early at Fir Park

This article contains exclusive comments from ex-PGMOL chief, FIFA official and former professional referee Keith Hackett.

Within the first two minutes, referee Steven McLean was forced to stop play after Diomande hit the deck inside Motherwell’s penalty area, holding his face while rolling in pain on the floor.

Any calls for a penalty from the away supporters were immediately waved away, and while there was clear contact between the player’s face and the ball, Hackett has no empathy for Diomande.

McLean was not afraid to show a card, with Tavernier, Max Aarons, Kieran Dowell, Lyall Cameron, and Elliot Watt all going into the book, and the former referee believes the Gers star should now face retrospective action for his actions.

Rangers

Rangers star deserves retrospective action

Speaking exclusively to Football Insider about Diomande’s fall in the box, the former referee said: “What worries me now is that players exaggerate contact. What you need to understand is that football is a contact sport.

“Players will jump for the ball, and they’ll have their arms out to gain elevation. Now, we’ve got players who are manufacturing these types of incidents, as though they’ve been knocked to the ground in a forceful way.

Rangers' Mohamed Diomande

“The referees and VAR are on alert at the start of the season. So, for me, they’ve made the right call. When you’ve got a player who exaggerates contact, it’s an act of simulation.

“If the game is going to get its act together, it needs to bring in retrospective action as a normal part of the game. This is outside of what is acceptable.”