James Rodriguez wins it. Great goal, but I thought it was the least impressive of the three in the sense it was fairly usual and conventional.
It hasn't been announced yet?
James Rodriguez wins it. Great goal, but I thought it was the least impressive of the three in the sense it was fairly usual and conventional.
WOrse than the least worthy goal winning, the cheating tramp henry presents the main prize. John Delaney has a lot to answer for :-)
I personally hear what you're saying, although the stage isn't supposed to come into it, according to the Rules of Allocation.
The fact that James represents a huge country and a global hispanic community probably decided what was, after all, a public vote. I thought his was the least impressive of the 3.
I think Tim Cahill can consider himself very unlucky not to make the top three as well.
I understand that. However, leaving aside the nature of how the winner was determined, the circumstances in which a goal is scored will always play a significant part in how it's perceived imo. In other words, a bigger occasion will always add to a goal's greatness.
Last edited by The Fly; 13/01/2015 at 2:41 AM.
Those above criteria were applicable for selecting the best goal when the award was first introduced in 2009/10: http://www.fifa.com/fifa-world-ranki...r-1120531.html
They're not relevant to this year's competition and feature in no official documentation, but merely on Wikipedia (and repeated on social media).
Not much point having all these rules when it's a public vote and there is no control of criteria. iI'd love to see a breakdown of the ip addresses for the votes and what vote was cast.
A panel of experts would maybe do a better job of choosing on merit, but even that would be a nightmare, and probably capture public attention less.
I voted for Kasami's goal originally, on merit (in my subjective opinion).
I was just going to edit my post after finding that out, but you've kinda done that for me.
They may not be relevant to this year's competition but I think the significance of the occasion and level of competition play an instinctive role in the appreciation of a goal. I will admit to a certain bias against Stephanie Roche's because of this, despite the obvious skill and technique involved.
Anyway, as Osarusan states above, these rules were made redundant by having a public vote to determine the winner.
Last edited by The Fly; 13/01/2015 at 4:40 AM.
I think the public vote is to generate publicity and publicity alone. And it works. I don't think it necessarily has any less validity than the Ballon d'Or poll, though.
That was published after the first round of voting. Colombia had the most visitors; I think we were third.Originally Posted by osarusan
Beaten at our own game I guess
I'd say it was a toss-up between Roche's and Rodriguez's goals for which one is the best. Rodriguez is in acres of space and has time to pick a spot, which he does excellently. Roche has to take on a defender, beats them perfectly, then finishes. The defender being there probably shades it for Roche.
I don't think van Persie's goal is anything special. He doesn't need to go into a swan dive after heading the ball. If he'd flicked it over the keeper, then landed on his feet, like he would have easily been able to do, we wouldn't even be talking about it as a goal of the season contender.
I thought RVP's goal was amazing. There was only one way he was able to beat the keeper. He met it perfectly while also cushion-heading it to make sure the pace was taken off the ball so it'd drop in over the keeper. Class.
Attachment 2211
Stephanie looking well among the big boys.
Forget about the performance or entertainment. It's only the result that matters.
Bookmarks