Depressing abuse suffered by Kai Havertz, his wife, and Tamworth’s Chris Wreh is representative of wider problem
Kai Havertz was braced for the criticism from the pundits, starting with those on TV and extending to the army of them in the pubs and front rooms across the United Kingdom; across the world, really. Like most footballers, the Arsenal forward accepts it. He knows that he belongs to a performance culture, even if it grates when the former professionals who have previously worn the shirt pile in with stuff that is surely a little too constructive. Where is the line? It is the question that pounds.
It would be crossed grievously after Arsenal’s FA Cup defeat by Manchester United at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday. Havertz had suffered, missing two clear chances and the decisive kick in the penalty shootout. He had also won a controversial penalty during normal time, which was missed by his teammate Martin Ødegaard and surely provoked United’s official X account into tweeting about “justice” when it was all over. That went into the mix, too.
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