The Peanut Roaster
Banned
Clutching at straws, it was no penalty.
You're right.
It wasn't a penalty. ( but it should have been )
Clutching at straws, it was no penalty.
Clutching at straws, it was no penalty.
http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/affederation/generic/81/42/36/lawsofthegame_2010_11_e.pdf
There's the laws of the game. Show me where it says getting the ball allows you to take the player out. Show me anywhere in the laws that says careless or reckless challenges are defined by how much contact is made with the ball.
How exactly is highlighting the laws of the game 'clutching at straws'. I'd accept criticisms of pedantry, maybe even jobsworth or stickler for rules, but clutching at straws?
In my opinion, it's the archaic "football is a contact sport" attitude that follows through with tactics such as "lets see if they like it up them" and "let them know they're in for a game" which is stopping the english game developing the skills needed to compete on an international stage.
Football has moved on from the good ol' days of smokers plodding up the wing on muddy fields with glove-less keepers picking up back passes. It's time english football attitudes moved on too.
Again?
Whether he got the ball or not is irrelevant. It's the same as any foul - it doesn't matter if you get the ball, what matters is how safe the challenge is. This was a challenge that ignored Murray's safety and resulted in him going off injured.
The challenge the keeper made was only ever going to result in him taking Murray out, regardless of whether he gets the ball, which makes it a foul.
I suppose you are happy to see players rolling around in 'agony' after the tidiest of challenges because they know it might get them something, or the way a huge number of strikers first thought once they get into the box is to go down like a sack of potatoes then shout and swear at the ref when it isn't given because that is what the rules encourage, or the way that the lightest brush against the keeper during a corner or freekick is rewarded with an instantaneous free kick, regardless of whether or not any sort of foul was committed.
How on earth did you get to that conclusion? Just because I think football should be about ball skills and not rough challenges it means I support diving? It means I support people dropping to the ground at the slightest touch? Give over.
Tackling is a skill.