World Cup 2010 Prediction Contest Join in & enjoy it :)
#301
Posted 2010-June-27, 15:49
George Carlin
#302
Posted 2010-June-27, 15:57
#305
Posted 2010-June-28, 02:57
this is the very best of the game? the game of the world?
per this forum...the rankings we are told are a joke......
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in any event...perhaps the best of the best will still win........
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As a nonexpert my impression of the game at the very top level is:
players cheat...cheat alot
refs are horrible...really horrible-----
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fans agree....the best advance...the game as is ....great...the world fav...........
#306
Posted 2010-June-28, 03:11
#307
Posted 2010-June-28, 03:52
mike777, on Jun 28 2010, 09:57 AM, said:
As an expert in Bridge you know that usually an opponent has to flop, to get you a good result. There are unforced errors, but you don't see them often at this level of play and there are forced errors that are a consequence of better individual strength or better (tactical) team moves.
As to the referees, there are great referees in the top leagues, but they are amateurs and the FIFA has to take referees from around the world.
mike777, on Jun 28 2010, 09:57 AM, said:
Of cause not that is bridge
mike777, on Jun 28 2010, 09:57 AM, said:
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mike777, on Jun 28 2010, 09:57 AM, said:
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After that, one has to admit that top teams are often of about the same strength. There is an element of luck involved.
mike777, on Jun 28 2010, 09:57 AM, said:
players cheat...cheat alot
refs are horrible...really horrible-----
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Actually it is not that simple, if you were fouled and manage to stay on your feet, but lose your chance to score, the referee will have trouble to recognize the foul.
So the best legal advice is: In case of a foul don't try to stay on your feet.
Most of the so called dives just follow this advice.
Of cause this means that there is room for discussion. These discussions are part of what makes interesting.
And yes there are some terrible referees.
#308
Posted 2010-June-28, 04:14
I don't see much of a problems with video proof to decide if a ball was behind the goal line or not. But that would not help if a player is between the camera and the ball.
There is not much of a problem to decide if a goal was scored by a player who was offside.
If no goal is scored immediately, what should a linesman do if he is unsure if a player is offside?
If he signals offside and the video proof shows he was wrong, what is the compensation? A free kick or a penalty?
So the linesman would not signal offside if he is in doubt. The play continues while the video crew checks for offside. After some time, the video crew signals the offside.
Do you reset the clock? The team that in lead could kill time that way.
#309
Posted 2010-June-28, 04:19
/rant
George Carlin
#310
Posted 2010-June-28, 04:43
gwnn, on Jun 28 2010, 11:19 AM, said:
/rant
You are probably right, but how could he know that the Mexican guy behind him was not lifting the offside?
Quote
3. Inadvertent Infraction
There is no obligation to draw attention to an inadvertent infraction of Law committed by one's own side (but see footnote to Law 75 for a mistaken explanation).
Why should a soccer player call attention to the fact that he was offside?
#311
Posted 2010-June-28, 04:53
What pisses me off is seeing the Mexican guys surround the referee shouting "he was offside! he was offside!!! look at the screen!" which was closely followed by the Argentinians "He wasn't! No he wasn't!! Please don't look at the screen!!!!". Of course surrounding the ref should be illegal and I would love to see some serious penalties awarded for this, but it is much more disgusting when the only reason they surround him is to try to sell a lie to him.
George Carlin
#312
Posted 2010-June-28, 05:08
As much as I dislike the "Coach" from Argentina, Tevez should not have made his own ruling by saying that he was offside.
And about the video ruling. Our expert on German TV had a great statement about this: Football lifes from emotions. The bad feelings are needed too.
Mistakes are part of the game and they are the salt to make the game hot and spicy.
In Germany we still talk about the games where we won World Championships. We still talk about great games and the WC 2006.
But we talk about "the Wembley goal 66" and "The dishonor of Gijon" and the lost against Austria in Argentina too.
Video proofs are no improvement. They make the game fairer, yes. But who needs this? In the long run, it is fair. I know no club and no country which has always luck. Do you?
Do you watch more Tennis after they have the bulls eye? Or do you enjoy it more? Do you watch more american football or icehockey after they have the video challenge? And do you enjoy it more?
To me, the answers are no. Of course, I am furious if such a big mistake like yesterday is made from a ref against my team. But this is part of the game.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#313
Posted 2010-June-28, 05:12
George Carlin
#314
Posted 2010-June-28, 07:04
Quote
Angry Mexico players protested to referee Roberto Rosetti after the screens in Johannesburg's Soccer City showed Argentina forward Carlos Tevez was offside before he scored the opening goal in a 3-1 victory on Sunday.
FIFA spokesman Nicolas Maingot said Monday that replaying the incident was "a clear mistake."
"This will be corrected and we will have a closer look into that," Maingot told a news conference Monday. "We will work on this and be a bit more, I would say, tight on this for the games to be played."
How about working on your nearsighted referees?
George Carlin
#315
Posted 2010-June-28, 07:38
I would rather have a completely impartial and sometimes faulty referee than a biased process.
For the same reason I think the FIFA is right to ban replays of controversial decisions on the in-stadium screen - of course the referee will be biased by watching his own mistake, and may try to compensate later.
Anyway, I am not at all against video replays, but it really is very tricky to get right in football.
#316
Posted 2010-June-28, 10:19
hotShot, on Jun 28 2010, 10:14 AM, said:
Rugby, a game with a lot less money, has a video ref to see whether a try was scored or not and has had for some years (at the top level anyway). It doesn't solve all problems especially when there are a lot of players literally on top of the ball - but it solves most.
Heck, my medium sized bridge club - with several orders of magnitude less money, is thinking of getting bridgemates. If we can afford technology, so can football - and the idiot politician at the head of FIFA should have resigned years ago.
Nick
#317
Posted 2010-June-28, 13:10
57) 1
58) 2
59) 2
60) 2
61) 2
62) 2
63) 2
64) 1
I can leave for a holiday in France now, where I won't touch a computer for at least two weeks.
I won't discuss football there either.
Finding your own mistakes is more productive than looking for partner's. It improves your game and is good for your soul. (Nige1)
#318
Posted 2010-June-28, 13:13
Have a good time in France Anyone there will talk only about Le Tour
#319
Posted 2010-June-28, 15:00
dicklont, on Jun 28 2010, 08:10 PM, said:
I won't discuss football there either.
Where in France? Any chance you will run into Fluffy, Shogi and me in Biarritz?
#320
Posted 2010-June-28, 16:03
You would think they could spend a little for some limited replay at least in world cup games every 4 years.
How limited? experiment. You got 4 years to tweak it.
I mean does not cricket and tennis have instant replay?
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As for the world rankings, if the current system is a joke, how hard is it to improve it?