Mario Balotelli escapes further punishment over Alex Song tackle

Man City striker facing three-match suspension after official saw clash with Arsenal player
Sent off: Mario Balotelli sees red during the game with Arsenal
11 April 2012

Mario Balotelli could yet have a final say in Manchester City's season after avoiding an extended ban for his wild challenge on Arsenal's Alex Song yesterday.

The controversial striker, who tonight begins a three-match suspension for his sending-off in Sunday's defeat at the Emirates Stadium, could have been hit with a further six-game punishment for his separate studs-up challenge on Song.

That clash went unpunished by referee Martin Atkinson at the time but the Football Association have said they cannot take retrospective action because it was seen by at least one of the four match officials.

A statement read: "Retrospective action can only be taken in scenarios where none of the match officials saw the players coming together.

"The normal scenarios in which retrospective action is taken are for 'off-the-ball' incidents.

"Retrospective action was introduced for off-the-ball incidents where there was no contest for possession and could not be deemed to be re-refereeing an incident."

That means Balotelli will now be eligible to play again in City's final three Barclays Premier League games of the season, starting with the derby against Manchester United on April 30.

But despite that, the 21-year-old's future at the Etihad Stadium remains uncertain after manager Roberto Mancini appeared to lose patience with him at the weekend.

Mancini said after the costly 1-0 loss, which left his side's Barclays Premier League title challenge in tatters, that he would "probably" try to sell the enigmatic Balotelli in the summer.

His dismissal at the Emirates for two bookable offences and the Song controversy were merely the latest in a long line misdemeanours on and off the field in the two years since his arrival from Inter Milan.

Indeed, they came at the end of a remarkable fortnight by Balotelli's own standards.

He first turned up unannounced at an Inter press conference, then had a training spat with Mancini, was involved in a car crash and was at the centre of tabloid revelations.

On the field he argued with team-mate Aleksandar Kolarov over who should take a free-kick against Sunderland.

Balotelli, who has been sent off four times in his City career and served another retrospective ban for stamping on Tottenham's Scott Parker, has apologised for his conduct on Sunday.

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