Rashford was in the squad?
I see him as more of a winger TBH, at least that's how he seems to be played by everyone.
Rashford was in the squad?
I was/am mildly pro-VAR but it is being woefully misused. Shouldn’t be used at the World Cup as the refs haven’t got to grips with it at all. Not even close to ready.
This. The rules as to when it should be invoked are simply not clear enough, and I worry that too many people will shout it down rather than encourage the authorities to look to improve the way it is used. People grumbling about VAR are quick to forget just how many high profile mistakes have meant a game's outcome going completely the wrong way - internationally, England have suffered more than most. It is almost criminal at the highest level, where a goals are scarce and really ought to be decided upon FAIRLY.I was/am mildly pro-VAR but it is being woefully misused. Shouldn’t be used at the World Cup as the refs haven’t got to grips with it at all. Not even close to ready.
Blimey, I am completely the reverse!
At last we seem to have a team brave enough to retain possession in tight spots. At times I thought our full backs and Stones in particular worked some lovely moves. More than happy to take the risks over keep giving the ball away a.k.a every other tournament I can think of in the last 25 years or so.
Right, I've let that sink in and I can't help thinking you're making a mountain out of a molehill.Many of the referees at this upcoming World Cup have NEVER used VARS. Just let that sink in for a moment.
I see him as more of a winger TBH, at least that's how he seems to be played by everyone.
Damn right, along with the players form Massive clubs like Burnley,Swansea,Stoke and Bournemouth.
Or maybe as he was the best performing in the qualifying he has more than enough credit in the bank ?
Personally I'm fed up with top level games being decided by poor decisions. Maradona's hand of God, TWO Sol Campbell headers disallowed (Argentina, Portugal), Lampard's goal that was only five feet over the goal line - and that is just England. I'd much rather FIFA persevered with VAR but made an effort to get it working properly.
No they wouldn't. Only ONE of them would, and that's the Lampard example. None of the others would be resolved by technology currently in use.those goals incidents would be resolved with the much simpler goal line tech thats now in widespread use. VAR and importantly the rules around it, have not matured enough to be used in the showcase football event. so they should persevere with it to get it right, then bring it to the world cup. in all probability we are going to have games decided by poor application of VAR.
Right, I've let that sink in and I can't help thinking you're making a mountain out of a molehill.
Some refs haven't used VAR before? So what? As long as the rules as to when it should be invoked are clear, there really ought not to be a problem.
Personally I'm fed up with top level games being decided by poor decisions. Maradona's hand of God, TWO Sol Campbell headers disallowed (Argentina, Portugal), Lampard's goal that was only five feet over the goal line - and that is just England. I'd much rather FIFA persevered with VAR but made an effort to get it working properly.
Let me stop you there because this is absolute rubbish from start to finish.The price to pay to try to correct these (very rare) clear and obvious errors is too great a one IMO. We can all cite examples of some absolute howlers that have proved costly, but they ARE extremely rare, they're not commonplace at all - they're just more memorable because of the stage they occurred on. You've given 3 examples over 30-odd years that are each about 10 years apart, one of which will never happen again btw, thanks to goalline technology (which works perfectly).
Personally I'm fed up with top level games being decided by poor decisions. Maradona's hand of God, TWO Sol Campbell headers disallowed (Argentina, Portugal), Lampard's goal that was only five feet over the goal line - and that is just England. I'd much rather FIFA persevered with VAR but made an effort to get it working properly.
The price to pay to try to correct these (very rare) clear and obvious errors is too great a one IMO. We can all cite examples of some absolute howlers that have proved costly, but they ARE extremely rare, they're not commonplace at all - they're just more memorable because of the stage they occurred on. You've given 3 examples over 30-odd years that are each about 10 years apart, one of which will never happen again btw, thanks to goalline technology (which works perfectly).
Referee's do get it right the vast, vast majority of the time, but there is always going to be an element of human error in the game. Even VARS won't fix that, because you've still ultimately got humans reviewing and interpreting decisions.
The game wasn't broke. It doesn't need fixing. All you're doing with VARS is shipping in a whole NEW batch of arguments and controversies to replace the old ones.
I see from the traffic on the site today about this, that everyone is BUZZING for this game.
As ever a little WAGER offers at least some interest in proceedings. Couldn't see any value in the betting mind, so limited to a little treble myself:
ENG-ITA draw
GER-BRA draw
ESP-ARG draw at a combined 35/1
The Germany Brazil game is on BT Sport. Might well end watching that one, when the England game inevitably disappoints
Who, exactly, is going to be the VAR for big games? Won't it need to be other qualified referees.
The price to pay to try to correct these (very rare) clear and obvious errors is too great a one IMO. We can all cite examples of some absolute howlers that have proved costly, but they ARE extremely rare, they're not commonplace at all - they're just more memorable because of the stage they occurred on. You've given 3 examples over 30-odd years that are each about 10 years apart, one of which will never happen again btw, thanks to goalline technology (which works perfectly).
Referee's do get it right the vast, vast majority of the time, but there is always going to be an element of human error in the game. Even VARS won't fix that, because you've still ultimately got humans reviewing and interpreting decisions.
The game wasn't broke. It doesn't need fixing. All you're doing with VARS is shipping in a whole NEW batch of arguments and controversies to replace the old ones.
No one saw that coming
Let me stop you there because this is absolute rubbish from start to finish.
I cited FOUR examples between 1986 and 2010 - 24 years, and in those 13 tournaments I think we qualified in 11. So when you say 30 odd years, you mean 24 years and over a THIRD of the times we got knocked out were down to poor refereeing decisions. That is an absolute farce. And of the four examples I cited, only ONE of them would be resolved by goal line technology as it is now.
These are facts.
I'm sorry but the game IS broken at the highest level.