The Premier League has seen numerous exhilarating fixtures since its inception in 1992.
More often than not, a game starts with 22 players on the pitch and finishes with the same number. However, we have recently seen games finishing with a significant reduction in numbers – particularly since the introduction of VAR.
But what top-flight games have received the most cards in the Premier League’s history? We have delved into the stats to find out the league’s ugliest fixtures. For this list, we consider players to have been booked twice as receiving three cards (2 yellows, 1 red).
Chelsea’s recent win over Bournemouth recently made the headlines for the wrong reasons, with referee Anthony Taylor handing out a record 14 yellow cards – a new Premier League record. Only three matches can claim to have seen as many bookings – here is the full list:
Rank
Match
Date
Yellow cards
Red cards
Bournemouth 0-1 Chelsea
Sep 2024
14
0
Tottenham 2-1 Sheff Utd
Sep 2023
13
1
Leeds 0-0 Chelsea
Oct 1998
13
1
Newcastle 2-0 Everton
Feb 1995
12
2
Everton 2-3 Liverpool
Apr 2001
12
1
Southampton 2-3 Wimbledon
Dec 1994
12
1
Tottenham 2-1 Liverpool
Sep 2023
11
2
Wolves 0-1 Aston Villa
Dec 2020
11
2
Liverpool 3-1 Everton
Mar 2006
11
2
Everton 2-2 Newcastle
Sep 2003
11
2
Arsenal 1-2 Leeds
Aug 2001
11
2
Tottenham 2-1 Arsenal
Nov 1999
11
2
West Ham 2-1 Arsenal
Oct 1999
11
2
13 West Ham 2-1 Arsenal (Oct 1999) 11 yellows, 2 reds
An all-London classic saw two sides quite literally come to blows back in October 1999, a time when Harry Redknapp was joined by Frank Lampard Sr in the West Ham dugout.
Four of the yellow cards were awarded to Arsenal midfielder Patrick Vieira and the Hammers’ Marc-Vivien Foe alone, with a total of 11 yellows brandished at Upton Park, where the Gunners failed to overcome a Paolo Di Canio brace – while outnumbering the Hammers’ cautions by 7 to 6.
Davor Suker’s 77th-minute strike offered the Gunners a glimmer of hope, but it wasn’t enough for Arsene Wenger’s side in a season when they would go on to finish second, 18 points behind Manchester United.
Steve Lomas booked
Martin Keown booked
Marc Vivien-Foe booked (x2)
Gilles Grimandi booked
John Moncur booked
Patrick Vieira booked (x2)
Paulo Wanchope booked
Dennis Bergkamp booked
Thierry Henry booked
12 Tottenham 2-1 Arsenal (Nov 1999) 11 yellows, 2 reds
Just five weeks after their action-packed defeat to West Ham, Arsenal were involved in another feisty affair against their even-bigger rivals, Tottenham Hotspur.
It was Spurs’ last league victory at White Hart Lane against the Gunners for 11 years, until April 2010.
The visitors picked up most of the cards, with Freddie Ljungberg seeing a straight red after taking issue with a challenge from Justin Edinburgh (he later aimed a V sign at referee David Elleray) and Martin Keown taking a walk after a second yellow in added time.
Steffen Iversen and Tim Sherwood scored two early goals for Spurs and Arsenal could only offer one of their own through Vieira.
Stephen Carr booked
Lee Dixon booked
Justin Edinburgh booked
Martin Keown booked (x2)
Oyvind Leonhardsen booked
Patrick Vieira booked
Stephen Clemence booked
Freddie Ljungberg sent off
Emmanuel Petit booked
Dennis Bergkamp booked
Davor Suker booked
11 Arsenal 1-2 Leeds (Aug 2001) 11 yellows, 2 reds
Arsenal fans, rest assured – it wasn’t anyone’s intention to feature three successive 2-1 defeats on this list of Premier League games with the most cards!
We’re talking about the Gunners again, but this time it was Leeds United who were the more aggressive of the two: Lee Bowyer and Danny Mills both saw red after picking up their second yellow cards in the final 15 minutes of play.
Leeds picked up 7 of the 11 yellows that day, and bizarrely ended the game not only as the victors, but with over half their team coming through unscathed.
Ian Harte put David O’Leary’s side ahead after 29 minutes with a cheeky quick free kick, but Arsenal equalised through Sylvain Wiltord three minutes later.
Then, in what was Arsenal’s first home game of the 2001/02 season, Mark Viduka’s 53rd-minute strike sent the away fans into bedlam and secured all three points for Leeds.
Ashley Cole booked
Danny Mills booked (x2)
Robert Pires booked
Olivier Dacourt booked
Thierry Henry booked
Lee Bowyer booked (x2)
Francis Jeffers booked
Eirik Bakke booked
Alan Smith booked
10 Everton 2-2 Newcastle (Sep 2003) 11 yellows, 2 reds
Everton’s 2-2 draw with Newcastle United at Goodison Park in September 2003 saw four second-half goals, three successfully converted penalties, a straight red and 11 yellow cards.
Newcastle had yet to register a Premier League win for the season, but took the lead after Gary Naysmith’s straight red card allowed Alan Shearer to net from 12 yards in the 58th minute.
However, the Magpies were already down to 10 men, as Laurent Robert had been shown a second yellow in the first half, and it took Everton just eight minutes to equalise through Tomasz Radzinski.
Shearer scored another penalty, but Duncan Ferguson’s spot kick salvaged a point for the hosts with three minutes to play.
Steve Watson booked
Andy Griffin booked
Alan Stubbs booked
Olivier Bernard booked
Gary Naysmith sent off
Laurent Robert booked (x2)
Tobias Linderoth booked
Craig Bellamy booked
Duncan Ferguson booked
Jermaine Jenas booked
Francis Jeffers booked
9 Liverpool 3-1 Everton (Mar 2006) 11 yellows, 2 reds
Liverpool’s 3-1 victory over Everton in March 2006 is not the only Merseyside derby to appear on this list. This was a particularly memorable one that featured a red card after only 18 minutes of play.
Steven Gerrard was the recipient of two quickfire yellows for kicking the ball away and a bad tackle on Kevin Kilbane from referee Phil Dowd at Anfield.
Six of Everton’s starting XI were also booked, while substitute Andy van der Meyde received a straight red card in the 73rd minute for an elbow just five minutes after coming on the pitch.
Luis Garcia doubled the Reds’ lead after a Phil Neville own goal. Tim Cahill pulled one back for the visitors, but Harry Kewell secured all three points for Liverpool with six minutes remaining.
Harry Kewell booked
David Weir booked
Steven Gerrard booked (x2)
Alan Stubbs booked
Xabi Alonso booked
Phil Neville booked
Tony Hibbert booked
Kevin Kilbane booked
Tim Cahill booked
Andy van der Meyde sent off
Duncan Ferguson booked
8 Wolves 0-1 Aston Villa (Dec 2020) 11 yellows, 2 reds
It was a Midlands derby with a difference. Not only was it played in front of no fans, but Wolves’ 1-0 defeat to Aston Villa at Molineux also witnessed one of the highest card counts in Premier League history.
There was little action in the opening stages of the fixture until the final 10 minutes, which saw five yellow cards and a red. There would follow an additional red card and a penalty four minutes into added time.
Mike Dean awarded Villa a penalty in the 94th minute after Nelson Semedo brought John McGinn down in the box, and Anwar El Ghazi converted.
A minute later, Joao Moutinho received his second yellow and joined Douglas Luiz, who had done the same late on, in having an early shower to leave both sides with 10 men and little time remaining on the clock.
Adama Traore booked
Douglas Luiz booked (x2)
Leander Dendoncker booked
Matty Cash booked
Joao Moutinho booked (x2)
John McGinn booked
Matt Targett booked
Ezri Konsa booked
Jack Grealish booked
7 Tottenham 2-1 Liverpool (Sep 2023) 11 yellows, 2 reds
Spurs’ 2-1 victory over Liverpool last season was one of the most controversial and dramatic games in recent years; it was memorable for numerous reasons. It quite literally had everything.
A straight red, three goals – including a 96th-minute own goal – 12 yellow cards and a goal that was incorrectly disallowed.
The referees’ body, PGMOL, officially apologised after the game for incorrectly ruling Luis Diaz’s first-half strike as offside.
Aside from the three goals and Joel Matip’s own goal, which gifted Spurs the victory, this Premier League thriller was also packed with cards.
Curtis Jones was handed a straight red, while Diogo Jota joined him in the dressing room after picking up two yellows inside the space of a minute in the second half.
Destiny Udogie booked
Curtis Jones sent off
Yves Bissouma booked
Alexis Mac Allister booked
Cristian Romero booked
Mohamed Salah booked
Pedro Porro booked
Diogo Jota booked (x2)
Alejo Veliz booked
Andy Robertson booked
Virgil van Dijk booked
6 Southampton 2-3 Wimbledon (Dec 1994) 12 yellows, 1 red
A five-goal Boxing Day thriller between Southampton and Wimbledon in the 1994/95 season was packed with plenty of festive cards.
Only two points separated the two sides going into the fixture, with both teams in mid-table. Despite this, the visiting Dons were just three points above the drop, with four clubs going down that season.
However, with the teams all square at the break, it was Wimbledon who stole all three points through a Dean Holdsworth penalty in the 72nd minute.
12 yellow cards were dished out during the 90 minutes, with Wimbledon’s Andy Thorn being sent off for his second yellow of the afternoon.
Jason Dodd booked
Chris Perry booked
David Hughes booked
Andy Thorn booked (x2)
Tommy Widdrington booked
Gary Elkins booked
Jim Magilton booked
Efan Ekoku booked
Iain Dowie booked
Mick Harford booked
Dean Holdsworth booked
5 Everton 2-3 Liverpool (Apr 2001) 12 yellows, 1 red
Onto a fixture where you would expect to see an abundance of cards on display. It was one of the most memorable Merseyside derbies of all time in April 2001 when Gary McAllister’s incredible free-kick saw Liverpool win at Goodison Park for the first time since 1990.
Emile Heskey opened the scoring for the visitors, bagging his 21st goal of the season after just five minutes. Duncan Ferguson and Markus Babbel then exchanged goals before Robbie Fowler smacked the post with a penalty.
Everton thought they had secured a point when David Unsworth’s penalty made it 2-2, but McAllister’s stunner in the fourth minute of stoppage time snatched a win for the Reds.
To add to the drama, Igor Biscan saw red after 77 minutes with his second yellow of the game, and 10 other yellow cards were handed out from the 9th minute, right up until the 94th.
Michael Ball booked
Igor Biscan booked (x2)
Duncan Ferguson booked
Dietmar Hamann booked
Richard Gough booked
Jamie Carragher booked
Paul Gerrard booked
Gary McAllister booked
David Unsworth booked
Stephane Henchoz booked
Niclas Alexandersson booked
4 Newcastle 2-0 Everton (Feb 1995) 12 yellows, 2 reds
Everton received a total of nine yellow cards on their visit to St James’ Park in February 1995. Two of those led to a red for Earl Barrett, who was making his debut after a move from Aston Villa, and Barry Horne, who made the walk to the dressing room just a minute later.
Newcastle scored their goals through Ruel Fox and a Peter Beardsley penalty. The Toon would go on to finish sixth that year and Everton ended 15th, albeit with an FA Cup triumph to cap the season.
Robbie Elliott booked
Neville Southall booked
Rob Lee booked
David Unsworth booked
Peter Beardsley booked
David Burrows booked
Earl Barrett booked (x2)
Joe Parkinson booked
Barry Horne booked (x2)
John Ebbrell booked
