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- #41
I'd like to congratulate you on being the first person to attempt to give a reason for your preference for the traditional angle, although it seems to me your argument is flawed since it's not true that you can't tell which direction the ball is moving (have a look at the two videos I've posted and tell me whether you don't know whether the ball is moving towards or away from the camera), and in any case even if what you are trying to say were true then it would apply just as much to watching the game from the traditional angle since the TV would still be 2D. It does raise the interesting idea 3D football on TV though.As for the original question, as TV is two-dimensional, viewing from behind the goal in real time can make it very difficult to ascertain distances. Sometimes, at full speed, we can’t initially pick up whether the ball is travelling towards or away from the camera. The traditional (and only sane) angle offers our brain more information to resolve that ‘lack of 3D’ problem and also gives a much better understanding of patterns of play, players’ positions etc