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[Football] Christian Norgaard red card overturned



Slum_Wolf

Well-known member
May 3, 2021
795
Correctly overturned. If Pickford hadn't reacted to the ball like an U7 keeper and he'd taken one in the face from Nørgaard I doubt it would have been overturned.
 
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Kalimantan Gull

Well-known member
Aug 13, 2003
13,557
Central Borneo / the Lizard
Sliding in, and even a 'safe' collision - fine. Leg up in the air with studs pointing right at the keeper - not quite the same thing.
Ball was in the air though. I think this situation was kind of the perfect storm where the collision is bad, so I can certainly see the argument for the red, but i just don't see how you can expect a striker not to try and get to the ball there. Plus how can he expect Pickford to launch himself into his path whilst he's doing so? I don't think it should be a red, and the FA agrees, but I'm astonished that they overturned it.
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
63,056
The Fatherland
Defo a red card from looking at the photos.....oh, is that Jordan Pickford...........a yellow at most in my opinion.
 


Easy 10

Brain dead MUG SHEEP
Jul 5, 2003
62,468
Location Location
Just presses home how utterly FARCICLE the laws are.

Baleba makes a non-challenge and receives a ridiculous 2nd yellow, so we can't appeal. The red and the ban stands.
Norgaard gets a straight red for a dangerous studs-up flying challenge that catches Pickford on the knee, red gets overturned on appeal.

Its really very simple. VAR should always review 2nd yellows which result in a red. And clubs should be allowed to appeal the second yellow, after all the result is exactly the same. Its obvious.

Unfortunately though, PGMOL is infested with total DICKHEADS. So here we are.
 




Eeyore

Colonel Hee-Haw of Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
26,352
Just presses home how utterly FARCICLE the laws are.

Baleba makes a non-challenge and receives a ridiculous 2nd yellow, so we can't appeal. The red and the ban stands.
Norgaard gets a straight red for a dangerous studs-up flying challenge that catches Pickford on the knee, red gets overturned on appeal.

Its really very simple. VAR should always review 2nd yellows which result in a red. And clubs should be allowed to appeal the second yellow, after all the result is exactly the same. Its obvious.

Unfortunately though, PGMOL is infested with total DICKHEADS. So here we are.
I agree with this, but I wonder that yellow cards could get a bit sticky as they are for lesser offences and a bit subjective (e.g totting up)
 


Guy Fawkes

The voice of treason
Sep 29, 2007
8,315
Defo a red card from looking at the photos.....oh, is that Jordan Pickford...........a yellow at most in my opinion.
Still frame images can be misleading and can give a false impression of something

I've always thought that incidents reviewed by the referee pitch side should be shown at normal speed, from all available angles and with a little of the build up play beforehand (ie to show if there was a loose ball they were both trying to reach, like this example)

They shouldn't be shown any stills, and it shouldn't be played in slow-mo and shown from only 1 angle (usually the angle that makes it look worst)

That way it's more likely that the decision they make fits the criteria that VAR was introduced as, for clear and obvious errors only, and if it's not clear and obvious from those, then the on-field decision stands.

Using only stills and slow-mo from 1 angle creates a narrative that the ref has got it completely wrong but other angles, or simply being at full speed will change how that incident is potentially viewed and could result in an different verdict after the ref views it on the monitor.
 
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Bozza

You can change this
Helpful Moderator
Jul 4, 2003
57,524
Back in Sussex
Strikers have slid in trying to make contact with crosses for ever, and will continue to do so. Sometimes they collide with the keeper, most often they don't, but they will never stop sliding in trying to get the ball, its instinctive and its innate, its what strikers do.

So you can send this guy off if you want but it won't change anything, strikers will continue to slide in instinctively and will continue to occasionally collide with the keeper.

I think the FA have recognised this by rescinding it, its the right decision.
Im not wanting to send him off, but in the modern game and with the way the laws are applied, I'd see that as a pretty clear red card, and I'm surprised that it was overturned on appeal, which is why I feel he's been lucky.
 




Han Solo

Well-known member
May 25, 2024
2,965
Generous. Was a harsh one but not harsh enough to change it imo.
 




US Seagull

Well-known member
Jul 17, 2003
4,815
Cleveland, OH
I agree with this, but I wonder that yellow cards could get a bit sticky as they are for lesser offences and a bit subjective (e.g totting up)
Exactly this. And I made the same point in the match thread.

Refs have pretty broad discretion to manage something like persistent fouling leading to a yellow. Now I don't think most refs would give a second yellow on that basis, but maybe if the player really didn't get the message from the first yellow and repeated warnings, they might have no choice. Then what do you have VAR do? Go back and review every small foul and tot them up to see if they reach the threshold for a second yellow?

It could get very sticky.
 




US Seagull

Well-known member
Jul 17, 2003
4,815
Cleveland, OH
Red card or not, I'm very surprised to see it overturned. PGMOL are usually pretty wary of overruling the on field decision because it undermines  all refs when it happens. If all in game decisions are subject to review days later, then nothing the ref does is final.

So it makes sense not to do that except in the case of particularly bad decisions. And I don't think this is that. It's maybe 50/50 at best.

Maybe they are feeling the heat from that whole Coote thing? And what to change the narrative to be about something else?
 


5Ways Gull

È quello che è
Feb 2, 2009
1,237
Fiveways, Brighton
I saw it as a harsh red, but still a red. It surprises me that it’s been overturned. VAR looked at it on the day & decided it was a red, so why is it now not? Maybe not much malice in it, but he did connect with Pickford’s knee studs up. It might be harsh but I don’t think there’s enough reasoning to overturn it. It’s not like new camera angles are showing that no contact was made…
I genuinely think if VAR can't get decisions correct, get rid of it. Having 3 bites at getting a decision right is madness!!!
 


Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,669
Cumbria
Red card or not, I'm very surprised to see it overturned. PGMOL are usually pretty wary of overruling the on field decision because it undermines  all refs when it happens. If all in game decisions are subject to review days later, then nothing the ref does is final.

So it makes sense not to do that except in the case of particularly bad decisions. And I don't think this is that. It's maybe 50/50 at best.

Maybe they are feeling the heat from that whole Coote thing? And what to change the narrative to be about something else?

I genuinely think if VAR can't get decisions correct, get rid of it. Having 3 bites at getting a decision right is madness!!!
Indeed - it's not as though it was a spur of the moment decision. The onfield ref watched it on the VAR screen didn't he?
 






Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
53,624
Goldstone
I saw it as a harsh red, but still a red. It surprises me that it’s been overturned. VAR looked at it on the day & decided it was a red, so why is it now not? Maybe not much malice in it, but he did connect with Pickford’s knee studs up. It might be harsh but I don’t think there’s enough reasoning to overturn it. It’s not like new camera angles are showing that no contact was made…

I didn't think it was harsh, I just thought it was unlucky. He had to go for the ball for a chance to score, but his leg was fairly straight and hit Pickford's knee. I can't believe it's been overturned.
 


Joey Jo Jo Jr. Shabadoo

I believe in Joe Hendry
Oct 4, 2003
12,218
Red card or not, I'm very surprised to see it overturned. PGMOL are usually pretty wary of overruling the on field decision because it undermines  all refs when it happens. If all in game decisions are subject to review days later, then nothing the ref does is final.

So it makes sense not to do that except in the case of particularly bad decisions. And I don't think this is that. It's maybe 50/50 at best.

Maybe they are feeling the heat from that whole Coote thing? And what to change the narrative to be about something else?

The appeals process has nothing to do with PGMOL. It is ran by the FA via an independent regulatory commission.
 


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