Arsenal have been fined 65,000 pounds ($82,000) by the English FA for failing to control their players after defender Myles Lewis-Skelly was sent off during their Premier League win at Wolverhampton Wanderers in January.
The FA charged the Premier League club after the players surrounded referee Michael Oliver after he showed Lewis-Skelly a straight red card for a foul on Matt Doherty on Jan 25.
"An independent Regulatory Commission has imposed a £65,000 fine on Arsenal ... (as) it was alleged that Arsenal failed to ensure their players did not behave in an improper way around the 43rd minute, and the club subsequently admitted to this charge," the FA said in a statement.
The video assistant referee (VAR) upheld Oliver's decision at the time of the incident but Arsenal subsequently appealed against the red card and the 18-year-old's three-match ban was overturned.
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The FA's statement included a letter from Arsenal, who highlighted that the players "did not behave in a way which was offensive, violent, threatening, abusive, indecent, insulting or provocative".
But the FA responded by saying that "there were, at times, nine AFC players in very close proximity to the referee" and that the red card "being overturned on appeal does not justify the reaction and affords no mitigation."
Arsenal won the match 1-0.