I'd say the first month or so of the new season will be flooded with pens for holding through VAR. Can't wait for all that nonsense to stop.
One of the most infuriating things about Sky's coverage yesterday was the amount of times the useless Redknapp and Arsenal ex-employee Scott declared with absolute certainty that it was a clear penalty and Monreal had clearly played the ball.
At half time they claimed to have watched the incident over and over, more than 30 times in fact, and it was a clear penalty.
They continued to repeat the same thing after the final whistle.
Just ONE look at the video in your post ... JUST ONE ... and it is as clear as day that AJ is the one playing the ball and there is virtually no contact with Monreal at all.
It begs the question what were those two clowns actually viewing?
I'd say the first month or so of the new season will be flooded with pens for holding through VAR. Can't wait for all that nonsense to stop.
I've said it once, I'll say it again, ours wasn't a pen, there's wasn't a pen, honours evened.
I will offer a hand of apology here. Yes I was trolling a little bit (for fun). But the way I was jumped on for having a differing opinion is quite an eye opener.
or the diving, shirt pulling, blocking off at set pieces and stealing of yards at free kicks and throw ins of football it goes on.
If you started banning for dishonesty in football you'd have no players left.
Ours wasn't a pen, there's wasn't a pen. Apart from the ref being the usual gash, evens honoured.
And the one that people never seem to include in the list of ways footballers cheat: deliberately fouling an opponent (to stop a counter, to stop him getting into the box). We don't just accept that, we praise it, encourage it, criticise players who don't do it. But it is a deliberate attempt to break the laws of the game to gain an advantage you don't deserve or to deny the advantage your opponents have earned.
This is a funny line. Not funny ha-ha. But it's weird how 'if you start banning people for that you'll have no players left' and 'if you start giving red cards, it'll soon stop' are used by people to either support or oppose clamping down on something.
AKA the "good foul"? As a poor quality pub-league centre back I used to make those sorts of challenges and it was just taking one for the team. These days it should be a guaranteed yellow, which means the same player can only do one per game and, after five of them, you're sitting out. It has not stopped the "good foul" at all. Sometimes you just need to do it. See Milner against Newcastle recently.
And the one that people never seem to include in the list of ways footballers cheat: deliberately fouling an opponent (to stop a counter, to stop him getting into the box). We don't just accept that, we praise it, encourage it, criticise players who don't do it. But it is a deliberate attempt to break the laws of the game to gain an advantage you don't deserve or to deny the advantage your opponents have earned.
AKA the "good foul"? As a poor quality pub-league centre back I used to make those sorts of challenges and it was just taking one for the team. These days it should be a guaranteed yellow, which means the same player can only do one per game and, after five of them, you're sitting out. It has not stopped the "good foul" at all. Sometimes you just need to do it. See Milner against Newcastle recently.
See? "It's taking one for the team" "it has to be done". It's cheating. And all the while we (as in British football) don't treat it as such, I don't think we (again, as in British football) have any right to look down on "them foreigners and their diving". If we so willingly 'justify' one form of cheating, what good does it do to come down on another form (especially when the one we're ok with involves risking your opponent's safety and the one we criticise doesn't)?
Isn't risking an opponents safety as bad as dishonesty? Even then, there's often dishonesty in those challenges, the pretence that the player is going for the ball, sometimes claims that they got it etc.
When did Arsenal last beat us? i tried google but it wasn't very helpful.
Fair play to MOTD for calling out their pen as a dive and ours as a pen.
See? "It's taking one for the team" "it has to be done". It's cheating. And all the while we (as in British football) don't treat it as such, I don't think we (again, as in British football) have any right to look down on "them foreigners and their diving". If we so willingly 'justify' one form of cheating, what good does it do to come down on another form (especially when the one we're ok with involves risking your opponent's safety and the one we criticise doesn't)?
Isn't risking an opponents safety as bad as dishonesty? Even then, there's often dishonesty in those challenges, the pretence that the player is going for the ball, sometimes claims that they got it etc.
In regards to retrospective bans, presumably they will become a thing of the past with the introduction of VAR?
Also i think that the punishment for trying to get a player sent off through deception should be at least the same as if not harsher than the punishment the player would have got if they con had worked and the opposition numbers were reduced. Bamford, for example, only got a 2 game ban for a dive when the player sent off would have got 3 if it wasn't overturned - if they could get a 4 game ban for that sort of deception, would they still try it?
I concur - how can the punishment for getting a player sent off through deception be less than a red card? How can anyone be so low to do that?
I think It should be 4 game ban at minimum and maybe also a point deduction for their club . That should be enough of a deterrent.
This. Dunk did everything to stop Lacazette getting away as he knew we were all out of position and they were on the counter and would've probably scored.Dunk's booking yesterday was in this category I think. Not dangerous, but deliberate holding to stop a break.
Going to be a very different league next year when the top six lose their extra man.
What on earth were Sky on? I thought I was going mad with Alan smiths commentary, then Redknapp & Scott’s analysis. At least another ex Arsenal striker was able to call it for exactly what it was - a dive. Sky and it’s narrative driven agendas are a joke at times.