With City and Chelsea being the other 2 possible teams drawn I can't help thinking that was written before the draw and the team was then retrofitted.One lower league side left in the cup and Man U draw them. Hot balls !
With City and Chelsea being the other 2 possible teams drawn I can't help thinking that was written before the draw and the team was then retrofitted.One lower league side left in the cup and Man U draw them. Hot balls !
This.Christ no
Thank God Liverpool have ben knocked out; it would have been unbearable had they ultimately reached the Final. Klopp's only been there 7 years but the media narrative would have ben unrelentingly all about him and the FA KLOPP Final etc.
And let’s not forget the stonewall red when we played Liverpool on Fergie. That somehow VAR looked at for 5 minutes. I can imagine the discussion it’s a definite red, I know although Klopp will moan all week about us and it’s only Brighton.Yes this. Said immediately he took his shirt off that he was gone. However, in what world do you have to leave the field after a bit of gamesmanship and then celebrating an absolutely iconic goal but not when you full on assault Pascal Gross while playing for Fulham?
So you think he shouldn't have been given the second yellow? Not sure why 'whatabout something else' is relevant here. Apologies if I'm failing to follow an obvious narrative. It can happenYes this. Said immediately he took his shirt off that he was gone. However, in what world do you have to leave the field after a bit of gamesmanship and then celebrating an absolutely iconic goal but not when you full on assault Pascal Gross while playing for Fulham?
No, by the letter of the law he had to go.So you think he shouldn't have been given the second yellow? Not sure why 'whatabout something else' is relevant here. Apologies if I'm failing to follow an obvious narrative. It can happen
Surely he's the ass in this story. There are few more widely understood rules in football than 'Take of your shirt, you get a yellow'No, by the letter of the law he had to go.
The law is an ass. Frankly, if you want to celebrate a goal like that by getting your Johnson out it should be ok. Doubt he'll ever get another one as important. But in general booking players for taking off a shirt to celebrate is silly, petty and joy sucking. But then these people came up with VAR.
Agree with this - especially as in the scenario yesterday where it meant a second yellow and off. Feels massively harsh in a sport where goals are such a precious commodity and cause such an adrenalin rush.No, by the letter of the law he had to go.
The law is an ass. Frankly, if you want to celebrate a goal like that by getting your Johnson out it should be ok. Doubt he'll ever get another one as important. But in general booking players for taking off a shirt to celebrate is silly, petty and joy sucking. But then these people came up with VAR.
This.
The Klopp wankfest is already enormous (there are people on Twitter posting eulogies and poetry). The only way to save humanity from it is for them to go out of the Europa League and finish third in the EPL.
I'll pretty much guarantee that in that moment he wasn't thinking of anything. The adrenaline had taken over and he'd probably forgotten he was on a yellow. Once the shirt's off it's too late. As a rational neutral watching the game I knew he was off straight away. As much as I don't agree it should be a caution-able offence, it currently is.Surely he's the ass in this story. There are few more widely understood rules in football than 'Take of your shirt, you get a yellow'
I agree with you on that. The shirt off business was deemed time wasting, but the whole goal celebration event now has transformed into community theatre and interpretative dance. With signature goal celebrations, pretty much literally. I don't think the shirt off wastes any extra time and it should not trigger a booking.No, by the letter of the law he had to go.
The law is an ass. Frankly, if you want to celebrate a goal like that by getting your Johnson out it should be ok. Doubt he'll ever get another one as important. But in general booking players for taking off a shirt to celebrate is silly, petty and joy sucking. But then these people came up with VAR.
Late winner sending your team to top the group in their first ever European Excursion - jump into the crowd and dance with them.Goal celebrations should, in my world, largely follow set patterns according to circumstance. Late conciliation goal in a 4-1 defeat? Manly handshake and jog back to the middle. Pulling back to 2-1 or 3-2 down with 10 mins left? Classic goal-down-retriever. Last minute equaliser? Shithouse the opposition fans. Last minute winner against your rivals in a massive match that's ebbed and flowed? Go as nuts as you want without punishment. All the rest of the time, feel free to do your trademarked celebration that you hope is going to make you the next cover star of FIFA / FC. Just don't go full Newcastle and try and combine eight celebrations into one.
Simples.
The TIME is the most important thing, IMO. Excessively long celebrations should either trigger multiple bookings - or better still, if they extend beyond a set time (let's say a nice round ONE MINUTE), then the other team should simply be allowed to restart the game, regardless of whether the scoring team are in position.I don't think the shirt off wastes any extra time and it should not trigger a booking.
Arsenal did the same at The Amex last season.The TIME is the most important thing, IMO. Excessively long celebrations should either trigger multiple bookings - or better still, if they extend beyond a set time (let's say a nice round ONE MINUTE), then the other team should simply be allowed to restart the game, regardless of whether the scoring team are in position.
A classic case in point, was the Roma third at the Olimpico, which they saw fit to celebrate for what felt like about 15 minutes (and was in reality about 2 and a half).
The new laws and guidelines for this season cover this though. Refs SHOULD be adding on the entire time from when it went dead (in the goal) to when it kicks off again. Whether they are is, of course, debatable. They should also be booking for throwing or kicking the ball away and the only player I've seen booked for it was Pascal Gross by (I think) Madeley at Wolves, where his real offence was to not return the ball to the EXACT free kick spot.The TIME is the most important thing, IMO. Excessively long celebrations should either trigger multiple bookings - or better still, if they extend beyond a set time (let's say a nice round ONE MINUTE), then the other team should simply be allowed to restart the game, regardless of whether the scoring team are in position.
A classic case in point, was the Roma third at the Olimpico, which they saw fit to celebrate for what felt like about 15 minutes (and was in reality about 2 and a half).