By David Lee Wheatley
Newcastle United manager Alan Pardew stooped to an all-time low this afternoon at the KC Stadium when getting involved in an astonishing touchline fracas with Hull City midfield man David Meyler, resulting in referee Kevin Friend sending the fiery Londoner to the stands after 72 minutes had elapsed of a match easily won by the visitors.
Meyler, in a rush to grab the ball after it ran out of play, ushered Pardew to one side as he went by; an action that was admittedly unnecessary. However, what came next was quite literally stunning: Pardew approached the Irishman with aggressive intent, the two going head-to-head before the 52-year-old directed an apparent head-butt in the direction of Meyler's cheekbone.
It's the latest in a long line of misdemeanours from the one-time Crystal Palace player during a turbulent managerial career at the helm of Reading, West Ham United, Charlton Athletic, Southampton and now Newcastle.
There was that infamous shoving match when in charge of the Hammers in 2006 with Arsene Wenger, for which both men received FA charges. Then the white-hot north-east derby atmosphere got the better of the Wimbledon-born boss when squaring up to then-Sunderland manager Martin O'Neill during the March 2012 draw between the bitter rivals, which also saw Magpies' goalkeeping coach Andy Woodman sent from the dug-out.
Most would think (or at least hope) Pardew would've learned to keep his cool in such circumstances by that stage, especially given that he is subjected to the high-pressure world of top-flight football on a regular basis. Alas, it was not to be, as he proceeded to push a referee's assistant in August 2012 next to Pardew's technical area with United one-up at home to Spurs. Furious Pardew insisted the ball had gone out of touch for a throw-in to his side and felt so aggrieved at the lack of a flag to the extent that he was compelled to 'do a Di Canio' on an official. For that, he was hit with a two-match touchline ban and £20,000 fine - nine games less than Di Canio received 14 years prior and only double the money.
Pardew's rap-sheet resembled something from the Shawshank Redemption (!) by then and yet he still continued unabated with his crazy behaviour. In January of this year he aimed a foul-mouthed rant at opposite number Manuel Pellegrini, as Manchester City ran out 2-0 winners following a feisty St. James' Park encounter in which Newcastle star Cheick Tiote had a goal wrongfully chalked off at a critical stage of the game. His language towards the Chilean was so colourful that Pardew condemned himself to community service of sorts by helping out with local projects close to his heart, despite the FA's reluctance to hand down further punishment to the beleaguered United manager. It was a nice gesture from the Newcastle supremo and earned him back a little self-respect in the wake of another ill-judged temper tantrum.
However, today's outburst displayed a nasty streak the levels of which have been rarely witnessed in the history of the Premier League and the authorities will have a task on their hands deciding exactly what sentence to give the under-fire Magpie manager.
He should be setting a fine example for his squad to follow, but what kind of example is this?
Thanks to their leader's antics, the United players will sadly get little attention for their resounding win over the in-form Tigers, while the incident firmly places the spotlight on much-maligned owner Mike Ashley as regards an appropriate response to such unbelievable scenes.
The Sunday Express newspaper was banned by the club for its assertion that Pardew would be sacked if they lost to Aston Villa last month, a fate they avoided in any case. This might well be an opportune moment for Ashley to pull the plug on Pardew's reign in light of his gross misconduct at the KC Stadium, thus making the Express' report seem not too far from the truth just two matches on from that desperately needed victory over Villa.
If Pardew does lose his job, he will have only himself to blame.
Twitter: @davewh1980

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