Cesc Fabregas says referee Anthony Taylor had 'bad day' after yellow card for 'diving'

  • Cesc Fabregas was booked for apparent simulation on Sunday
  • Chelsea midfielder says Anthony Taylor 'had a bad day at the office'
  • Blues boss Jose Mourinho said that Chelsea are victims of a 'scandal' 

Cesc Fabregas believes referee Anthony Taylor 'did not have the best game of his life' after booking the Chelsea midfielder for diving during Sunday's draw at Southampton.

Jose Mourinho was adamant Chelsea should have had a potentially match-defining penalty early in the second half when Fabregas went down under pressure from Matt Targett.


Instead of a spot-kick, however, referee Taylor deemed it a dive and booked the infuriated Spain midfielder - part of a what manager Mourinho believes is a growing 'campaign' against his side.

Chelsea star Cesc Fabregas said that referee Anthony Taylor was not at his best in the game at St Mary's

Chelsea star Cesc Fabregas said that referee Anthony Taylor was not at his best in the game at St Mary's

Fabregas smiles and holds his hands up in disbelief as referee Taylor holds aloft the yellow card

Fabregas smiles and holds his hands up in disbelief as referee Taylor holds his yellow card for simulation

Cesc Fabregas could not contain his emotions after being booked for diving against Southampton

The Spaniard cannot contain his emotions as he is shown a yellow card after apparently diving in the box

'There was definitely contact,' Fabregas said on chelseafc.com.

'I don't think the referee had the best game of his life but we're all human and a bad day at the office can happen to anyone.

'That's it, let's not talk more about it, we have to talk about football.'

After the Barclays Premier League leaders' run of five successive wins in all competitions was ended with a 1-1 draw at Southampton, Mourinho claimed Chelsea are the victim of a diving campaign which is costing them points.

'In other countries where I worked before, tomorrow in the sports papers it would be a front-page scandal because it is a scandal,' the Chelsea boss said following the match.

Replays show that contact is made with Fabregas as he controls the ball past the oncoming Matt Targett

Replays show that contact is made with Fabregas as he controls the ball past the oncoming Matt Targett

A reverse angle shows that Matt Targett's right leg makes contact and appears to trip the Chelsea midfielder

A reverse angle shows that Targett's right leg makes contact and appears to trip the Chelsea midfielder

'I think it is a scandal because it is not a small penalty - it is a penalty like Big Ben.

'In this country - and I am happy with that, more than happy with that - we will just say that it was a big mistake with a big influence in the result.

'I am happy that it is this way, with respect for the referee. He made a big mistake like I make, like the players make sometimes.'

Chelsea have found themselves at the heart of the simulation debate in recent weeks, with Diego Costa and Willian booked for supposedly taking a tumble in the win against Hull.

Jose Mourinho is clearly unhappy with the decision after seeing one of his players booked for simulation 

Jose Mourinho is clearly unhappy with the decision after seeing one of his players booked for simulation 

After that match Tigers boss Steve Bruce compared a Gary Cahill dive as 'like something out of Swan Lake' and West Ham manager Sam Allardyce accused Branislav Ivanovic of going down 'looking for a penalty' on Boxing Day.

Asked if the Cahill and Ivanovic incidents had influenced referees, Mourinho retorted: 'They are not incidents, they are not incidents.

'Of course [it has influenced the referee]. That's a campaign, that's a clear campaign.

'People, pundits, commentators, coaches from other teams - they react with Chelsea in a way they don't react to other teams.

'They put lots of pressure on the referee and the referee makes a mistake like this. We lose two points, Fabregas earns a yellow card.'

Mourinho made those comments to the BBC and let loose again in the post-match press conference. The Portuguese said this has been an issue since the first day of the season, when Costa was wrongly booked for a dive against Burnley, and called for a change to the system.

'The double punishment is something unbelievable,' Mourinho said.

'Anthony [should go to a] screen, see that he has made a mistake - he is a good guy, an honest guy.

'He writes, "I made a mistake, let's clean the yellow card for Cesc". It should be a simple process.'