Well, in that case, they should look at the Greek ref, he cheated us.
Is this a first Uefa action? Sounds good to me
"UEFA has opened disciplinary proceedings against Lithuania midfielder Saulius Mikoliunas for deceiving the referee, following the incident which brought about a penalty for Lithuania in the UEFA EURO 2008™ qualifying Group B match against Scotland in Glasgow on Saturday."
http://www.uefa.com/uefa/keytopics/k...id=586080.html
Well, in that case, they should look at the Greek ref, he cheated us.
Without sounding too cynical, It's easy to do it to a Lithuanian player when they lost 3 or 4-1 anyway.
City definetly have the best bands playing at half-time.
O'Bama - "Eerah yeah, I'd say we can alright!"
G.O'Mahoney Trapattoni'll sort ém out!!
Well it is a start and it is a good non controversial place to start.
I think when this particular pandoras box is opened then we could get to a situation (similar to Rugby) where Scotland could cite the diver.
They've charge Scolari for throwing a dg at one of the Serbian players.
No doubt Gordon Smith had a word in David Taylor's ear. Good news really. It would be impossible to punish a player for over-reacting even for the slightest contact but when a player blatently dives with conclusive proof that there was no contact at all then I feel they should dish out 2 game bans. That will have a positive effect on diving.
Top Breeders recommend drinkfeckarse....
It's time for video replays for crucial incidents like goals (the Chelsea one against Blackburn), penalties and sending offs (Hunt). Shouldn't slow the game much as everyone would prefer to see the correct decision as opposed to having to listen to managers (and Andy Gray) moaning about the ones that the refs get wrong.
Forget about the performance or entertainment. It's only the result that matters.
video replays why? things like this are great talking points, sure it would be frustrating if its happens against your team but the majority of these things balance themselves out over the course of a season or a qualification series, i.e. chelsea got a highly controversial penalty against liverpool and had a legit goal ruled out against blackburn. imo human error is what makes the game great, players make mistakes, managers make mistakes, so do officials, its a human sport.
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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LOI section on balls.ie - http://balls.ie/league-of-ireland/
Agree with that. Fouls are interpretations, video should only be used for what is a simple yes or no decision.
"Did the ball cross the line?" even in rugby, a similar question to that has been controversial at times.
In fact, rather than using video, I'd prefer some kind of microchip (fantasy world, I know), which alerts the ref when the ball has crossed the goalline, or any line. Obviously that doesn't help with diving.
I think punishment for diving can only be handed out when the dive is obvious beyond any dispute. Otherwise it will create more controversy than it stops.
Last edited by osarusan; 18/09/2007 at 2:24 PM.
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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New blog if anyone's interested - http://loihistory.wordpress.com/
LOI section on balls.ie - http://balls.ie/league-of-ireland/
The microchip technology exists but hasn't reached a satisfactory stage of development (there were also conflicts with existing FIFA sponsorship deals.) And Hawkeye is by no means infallible.
It's a non-issue way down the list of priorities, in my view. 99% of the competitive games which take place worldwide aren't televised and the overwhelming majority of grounds don't possess the requisite facilities. The English media (and idiots who take their cue from them and listen to Andy Gray) bleat on about this every couple of years when one high-profile incident arises, irrespective of the fact that most are attributable to bad officiating rather than anything else. I've no problem with an official making an erroneous marginal call because he's not superhuman (linesmen do it 2-5 times per game at least) as long as he controls the game fairly and calmly.
A leading authority on League of Ireland football since 2003. You're probably wrong.
It would obviously only be used in top leagues and games. England might not have won the World Cup in 1966 if that technology existed then
Should be used for penalties and goals. I am surprised Andy Gray would be in favour of it. WOuld make him redundant because he spends 85% of his time bleating about refereeing decisions.
Forget about the performance or entertainment. It's only the result that matters.
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