No, he didn't had to go. In the break I was watching the comments by the Belgian T.V. and they had a live phonecall with their leader of refferees assosiation (or w/e you call that) of Belgium, and he told he had two options: 1. Give the goald and Lehman a yellow card. Everybody wins. 2. Deny the goal, give a free kick, and send the keepr of. Everybody loses. Of course, I came up with that. It's not like it's such a hard thing to conclude, is it? He commited a professional foul, denied Eto'o and goalscoring chance and was the last man. That equals a red card in football. The ref blew up straight away, what happened after was irrelevant. You say Lehmann should have been booked at the goal given. He commited a red card offense, not a yellow, and should have went off with the goal standing.