An interesting dissection of last night's penalty shoot-out by London School of Economics professor and "definitive penalty expert" Ignacio Palacios-Huerta: http://www.thescore.ie/argentina-hol...64101-Jul2014/
Indeed, Van Gaal did state that he'd asked Vlaar to go up first because he "thought he was the best player on the pitch so should have confidence". I'm not sure how that apparent expression of faith in hindsight corresponded with him supposedly having also asked two refuseniks to take the first penalty before resorting to asking Vlaar, though...Originally Posted by Ignacio Palacios-Huerta
Last edited by DannyInvincible; 10/07/2014 at 9:38 PM.
It's par for the course from Van Gaal. He's the clear winner of the WC 2014 self-grandiosment award
In the qf shoot out, the Dutch were excellent, a focussed group and confidently scored all their efforts. Van Gaal steps up to receive the praise for his intervention, a masterstroke, a genius a brave decision etc Van Gall basked in his glory for a few days.
For the SF shoot out, it was the players who bottled it, not Van Gaal.
I love how there are experts in the science of penalties. Ben Littleton (?) has just written a book on it.
Yesterday I was picking my son up from summer football camp. I was early. I took about 20 penalises into an open goal while I was waiting for him. I was trying to score "good" penalties, firm and close to the posts. About ten were just as I wanted them. About 5 were awful, if the keeper had guessed right he'd have saved them easily. About 5 were ok. Even a good guess and it was touch and go. I hit an early one over so I went low the rest of the time!
There was no science in it at all!
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See the link embedded in this article, suggesting backspin nearly led to Vlaar's penalty going in.
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/g...g-9600224.html
Here's another angle
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uX2AfxFelj4
Last edited by Stuttgart88; 11/07/2014 at 4:18 PM.
I enjoyed this contribution by Mark Steel in today's Indy
http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/...s-9598686.html
The footage from closer up shows Vlaar flicked the ball ever so slightly with his shoulder after it came back to him. It was very slight - it pretty much skimmed off him - but it was definitely enough to interrupt the ball's trajectory away from goal and possibly increase the back-spin on it.
I don't know why some media outlets are still making out as if there is any debate over whether or not he touched it/it touched him. Well, it's saturation coverage, isn't it? It's pretty clear there was contact though. Besides, the ball stopped on the line as it returned back towards goal, so much ado about nothing really.
Is the old rule about a shoot-out penalty being dead once the ball stops going forward gone?
(Thinking Bruno Bellone in 1982, which shouldn't have stood)
It must be. Are you sure the rule wasn't/isn't simply that the ball must be kicked forward? This one was given in a Moroccan fixture between FAR Rabat and Maghreb Fez in 2010 despite the ball going back from goal due to the keeper's save before backspin took it back in and over the line:
Here are the rules on penalty kicks: http://www.fifa.com/aboutfifa/footba...d=1290872.html
I assume whichever of those rules are applicable also govern shoot-out situations.
The Independent article above features this video of Vlaar's penalty:
The touch of his shoulder is even clearer in that one yet they invite the viewer to "judge for yourself whether Vlaar touched it or not"...
Law 14 currently states:
That would imply the ball can move away from goal before going in again and that the penalty is not complete until the ball stops moving (or until the ref deems it complete, as is also stated). It explicitly covers (and allows for) instances where the ball might rebound off a post away from goal, hit the keeper's back and bounce back into the net behind him.Originally Posted by FIFA
Was the rule different in 1986? According to this, FIFA clarified the rule after the Bellone controversy: http://web.orange.co.uk/article/gaff...shoot-out-laws
How reliable that is, I'm not sure, but, if they clarified it rather than amended it, it would suggest the rule was always intended to be as is stated above.
Edit: A bit from Balls.ie on it: http://balls.ie/football/rule-clarif...-have-counted/
Bellone's penalty is at 3:50.Originally Posted by Balls.ie
Last edited by DannyInvincible; 11/07/2014 at 5:43 PM.
Danny, would you award this goal?
My little fella is the goalkeeper.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=fB4jKw...ature=youtu.be
yep, my recollection is that the rev awarded the goal during the shoutout but at the time the rule was pretty much as soon as the shot had missed it was a miss. So, back then it shouldn't have been a goal.
I think there was a natural justice in the outcome though as France had a certain goal prevented by a professional foul during normal time, enforce the automatic red card rule was introduced too.
My memory is hazy though. Even those of us with autism can forget things.
I would per Law 14.
But I dunno. I'm a bit concerned that the goalposts in question aren't really regulation. I would say Danny has more truck with that as an issue.
DID YOU NOTICE A SIGN OUTSIDE MY HOUSE...?
Definitely a goal!
And pens are still rank. The only thing the US ever got right was that rushing thing from the halfway line, with 5 seconds to shoot...
The best idea is still extra time and taking a player off every 5 minutes, eventually you get a winner in open play...
Weren't the MLS penalty's dropped after they caused too many injuries or something? I could have sworn I read that somewhere, that goalies were just flinging themselves at the attackers.
Author of Never Felt Better (History, Film Reviews).
*desperately goes in search of rules mentioning tree trunks and buckets*
Hehe, I'd have to give it. That'll teach him not to step off his line early!
I'm not sure what the wording of the rule was back in 1986, but if it mentioned something along those lines, one could surely argue simultaneously that so long as the ball proceeded in a continuous motion caused by the taker's kick, the shot was still in process. What could be certain was that the shot going wide would constitute a miss, as would the ball, or shot, coming to a stop.
If the case was that the shot was deemed a miss as soon as the ball's trajectory was diverted from its initial line, what about penalties going in off the post or in off, say, the keeper's outstretched fingertips without having gone backwards? Should they have been discounted too? If you argue that those examples should still have counted, why should an instance where the ball might simply have hit a different part of the post and changed course but still ended up in the net by virtue of a rebound off the keeper's back or heavy back-spin on the ball not also have counted? When would the shot have been deemed a miss in those instances? I can't see how distinction could have been made unless the rule specifically mentioned that a penalty ceased to be in process once the ball was no longer moving forward towards the goal. If it did, then the referee would have been one hundred per cent in the wrong to award Bellone the goal. I have a feeling the rule wouldn't have been so clear-cut though.
Last edited by DannyInvincible; 12/07/2014 at 12:00 AM.
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