Martinez red card row deepens as Carrick blasts Tierney after Leeds loss

Martinez shown a straight red against Leeds United

The Martinez red card turned a bad night for Manchester United into something heavier: a defeat, a refereeing row, and a fresh layer of pressure before a major trip to Chelsea. After Leeds beat United 2-1 at Old Trafford, Michael Carrick made referee Paul Tierney the centre of the fallout, arguing the dismissal of Lisandro Martinez changed the match and left his side chasing from a deeper hole.

Michael Carrick

Where the anger found its target

Carrick did not hide behind vague frustration. He said United had stayed positive and tried to fight back, but described the decision to send off Martinez as another shocking call against his side and one of the worst he had seen. He also argued that Dominic Calvert-Lewin’s earlier contact mattered, insisting the movement that followed was not aggressive and should never have ended with a red card. Carrick then widened the complaint, saying United were also angry about the build-up to Leeds’ opening goal after Leny Yoro appeared to take a blow to the head.

How the Martinez red card still hangs over United

This is where the system matters. Once Tierney went to the pitch-side monitor and dismissed Martinez in the 56th minute, the incident stopped being only a flashpoint and became the match’s power shift. United were already 2-0 down by then, so the review did not just settle a disciplinary moment; it shaped the rest of the contest, narrowed United’s path back, and opened the door to a possible ban that Carrick said the club may now try to appeal.

Leny Yoro contests for the ball against Dominic Calvert-Lewin

Leeds had already done the damage early. Noah Okafor struck twice in the first half, with United struggling defensively and missing the suspended Harry Maguire. Even after going down to 10 men, United found a response when Casemiro headed in Bruno Fernandes’ cross in the 69th minute, giving Fernandes his 17th league assist of the season. But the comeback stopped there. Leeds survived the late pressure and left Old Trafford with a league win there for the first time in 45 years and a first top-flight victory in the fixture since 2002.

What the defeat now drags into view

The consequences stretch both ways. For Leeds, the win moved Daniel Farke’s side six points clear of the relegation zone with six games left. For United, the bigger problem is that a match they wanted to treat as one setback now carries disciplinary and momentum risk into the next one. Carrick tried to steady the line by saying United would look to improve, but the numbers around the table make this harder to dismiss as routine: United remain third, only seven points above sixth-placed Chelsea, and now head to Stamford Bridge with the Martinez case still unresolved and their control over the race under fresh stress. That is why this matters beyond one red card. It may shape the pressure around United’s next week, not just the anger from their last one.

This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.

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