Matty Cash sends message to stranded teammate as Aston Villa sink Brighton

Steven Gerrard took responsibility for Matty Cash’s yellow card after the defender revealed a message of support to a Poland teammate in Ukraine when he opened the scoring for Aston Villa in a much-needed win.

Cash broke the deadlock at Brighton in a game delayed by half an hour as the Villa coach was stuck in traffic. He then took off his shirt to reveal a “stay strong” message to the Dynamo Kyiv defender Tomasz Kedziora and received a caution as a result. Ollie Watkins then scored his first goal since December to wrap up a victory for Villa as Brighton once again failed to win at home.

After a lengthy social-media post earlier in the day defending Poland’s decision not to play against Russia following the invasion of Ukraine, Cash arrowed a fine, low finish in off the post from 20 yards. He then displayed a message to Poland team-mate Kedziora and his family, who are stranded in the Ukrainian capital, picking up a booking for the gesture – something his manager is taking the blame for.

“I’ll take responsibility for Cashie’s yellow card,” he said. “I should have spoken to the players before the game and said to them: ‘If you score any goals, remain calm’.

“We’ve all got to respect the situation and I think that’s what Matty tried to do. But I’ll certainly take responsibility for that. There’s no blame towards Matty. Everyone has different feelings. That’s on me, that one.”

It is understood John Brooks booked Cash because he had fully removed his shirt and not for showing a message written underneath but Gerrard refused to criticise the decision taken by the official. “This yellow card is on us,” he added.

“There’s certainly no finger-pointing. There’s no blame on Cashie at all. I should have mentioned it before the game to all the players and I didn’t, so I’m responsible for that yellow card. There’s certainly no blame towards the player or the Premier League. That’s on me.”

Ollie Watkins doubles Aston Villa’s lead at Brighton
Ollie Watkins doubles Aston Villa’s lead at Brighton. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Action Images/Reuters

Cash was not the only Poland international on the pitch, with Brighton head coach Graham Potter revealing Jakub Moder had also backed his national team’s decision taken earlier in the day.

Asked if he had spoken to the forward, Potter said: “Not to me specifically, but he mentioned to our staff and is happy with the decision that has been made. Obviously, he shares the same concern that we all have.”

The Fiver: sign up and get our daily football email.

Cash’s caution was one of nine bookings dished out by Brooks – but Potter had no issues with the officiating after watching Brighton’s third straight league defeat without scoring. “Both teams were competitive, both teams wanted to win and lost the previous matches,” he added. “There was a desire there to compete and to win, it was there from our guys and those from Aston Villa, so no problems [with the referee].” PA Media

source: theguardian.com