by Man Friday » 22 Jan 2009 12:37
by Ian Royal » 22 Jan 2009 12:40
Man Friday Burnley had 90 minutes to score their away goals. Spurs had 120 minutes to score theirs. If away goals were to count (as they are in this competition), the match should have been decided at the end of 90 minutes and thereby awarded to Burnley.
Same thing happended to us against Middlesbrough in the quarter-finals of the League Cup in 1996/97.
Isn't it 90 minutes in European competitions and extra-time played only if the number of away goals are the same?
by rg6royal » 22 Jan 2009 12:55
by chilipepper91 » 22 Jan 2009 13:02
by Alan Partridge » 22 Jan 2009 13:05
by Tony Le Mesmer » 22 Jan 2009 13:09
Man Friday Burnley had 90 minutes to score their away goals. Spurs had 120 minutes to score theirs. If away goals were to count (as they are in this competition), the match should have been decided at the end of 90 minutes and thereby awarded to Burnley.
Same thing happended to us against Middlesbrough in the quarter-finals of the League Cup in 1996/97.
Isn't it 90 minutes in European competitions and extra-time played only if the number of away goals are the same?
by soggy biscuit » 22 Jan 2009 13:15
Tony Le MesmerMan Friday Burnley had 90 minutes to score their away goals. Spurs had 120 minutes to score theirs. If away goals were to count (as they are in this competition), the match should have been decided at the end of 90 minutes and thereby awarded to Burnley.
Same thing happended to us against Middlesbrough in the quarter-finals of the League Cup in 1996/97.
Isn't it 90 minutes in European competitions and extra-time played only if the number of away goals are the same?
Firstly, Away goals dont count double in any competition. If thats so Spurs won 8-5 on agg.
by Tony Le Mesmer » 22 Jan 2009 13:27
by Compo's Hat » 22 Jan 2009 13:40
Alan Partridge How would the sponsors and Tv companies feel if they lost a big fish for the final and replaced it with Burnley?
Or they could give the big fish more time to get throughthus making more money. That's what it comes down to, not fairness.
by Bill Oddie's Beard » 22 Jan 2009 13:50
by Thaumagurist* » 22 Jan 2009 13:57
by Tony Le Mesmer » 22 Jan 2009 14:30
Bill Oddie's Beard I seem to recall Milan beating Inter on away goals in the Champs League a few years ago, even though they both play at the same ground
by AlexY25 » 22 Jan 2009 16:55
by Baines » 22 Jan 2009 17:14
Danny Baker After 90 minutes we need a big black mushroom as per bar biliards on the centre spot. If either team knocks it over they lose all their goals.
by Ian Royal » 23 Jan 2009 12:28
Alan Partridge How would the sponsors and Tv companies feel if they lost a big fish for the final and replaced it with Burnley?
Or they could give the big fish more time to get throughthus making more money. That's what it comes down to, not fairness.
by Toon Toon Blue army » 23 Jan 2009 12:32
by Four Of Clubs » 23 Jan 2009 13:41
Tony Le MesmerBill Oddie's Beard I seem to recall Milan beating Inter on away goals in the Champs League a few years ago, even though they both play at the same ground
They did indeed, in Semi Final as well, having gone 30 years since their last final. Talk about unjust! And you wonder why Inter kicked off when they were losing again to them in that competition 2 years on.
by Tony Le Mesmer » 23 Jan 2009 16:15
Toon Toon Blue army I thought the whole idea of away goals was to encourage teams to attack and score away from home and to not sit back and defend hoping for a 0-0?
by Ian Royal » 23 Jan 2009 23:53
by AthleticoSpizz » 24 Jan 2009 00:05
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