by Jackson Corner » 18 Feb 2010 13:07
by Big Foot » 18 Feb 2010 13:21
readingfc13 They can have no arguments about the goal imo. The Porto players were within their rights to take the freekick quickly and the Arsenal players should have been more awake to the play developing. Fabianski gave the ball to the ref then turned his back and Campbell was just standing there with his hands on his knees.
Didn't a similar thing happen to us in a 2-1 home defeat to Brighton (iirc), where Hahnemann picked up a pass from Murty, the Brighton forward took the ball from Hahnemann's hands, squared the ball for someone else to tap in?
Edit: found it, it was Brighton at home on 4th April 2003On sixteen minutes the Royals conceded a bizarre goal. Hahnemann picked up the ball from a back pass. The referee gave a free kick. The Reading defence froze, Hahnamann tossed the ball away and turned his back on the game. Zamora eagerly grabbed the ball slid it to Booker who tucked it away before anyone could react.
by Sun Tzu » 18 Feb 2010 13:24
by papereyes » 18 Feb 2010 13:44
by Sun Tzu » 18 Feb 2010 13:58
papereyes Not turned his back on play
Communicated to Campbell that the freekick was being taken.
.
by TBM » 18 Feb 2010 14:21
by papereyes » 18 Feb 2010 14:23
Sun Tzupapereyes Not turned his back on play
Communicated to Campbell that the freekick was being taken.
.
I don't think there is any responsibility to inform the defenders of what is going on, they ought to know the laws and be able to react in accordance with them. Telling them would give them an unfair advantage over the attackers - who should get the advantage in any free kick situation.
I'm interested in why you think there needs to be a 'way round' anything. The 'way round' situations like this is for keepers to not pick up back passes for no reason..... once they do that then they have to accpet they have put the team in a bad situation.
Obviously there was not a lot Fabianski could do to prevent it
papereyes Not turned his back on play
Communicated to Campbell that the freekick was being taken.
by 1871 Royal » 18 Feb 2010 14:56
Jackson Corner These referees are going to the World Cup! If these are the best in the world then god help us. You could not get a more blatent offside, and why did he not play advantage for Bayerns first goal before giving the pen.
by Thaumagurist* » 18 Feb 2010 17:32
by Sun Tzu » 18 Feb 2010 17:37
Thaumagurist*
As for quickly taken free-kicks, I'm still not sure about the idea of them, especially being so near to the goal.
by cmonurz » 18 Feb 2010 17:40
by Sun Tzu » 18 Feb 2010 17:44
cmonurz Are there any other sports where penalty infringements are not restarted on the referee's go ahead?
by cmonurz » 18 Feb 2010 17:46
by Sun Tzu » 18 Feb 2010 17:55
by SLAMMED » 18 Feb 2010 18:44
TBM if he didn't he would have got a yellow card.
by papereyes » 18 Feb 2010 18:53
Sun Tzu I think the other thing to remember is that there has to be 'de facto' approval' by the ref for quick free kicks. The players have to ensure they meet certain criteria (ball in the right place, ball stationary) or the ref will pull them back and make them take a 'ceremonial'. It's not complete anarchy !
by rabidbee » 18 Feb 2010 19:34
by Ark Royal » 18 Feb 2010 19:40
by Sun Tzu » 18 Feb 2010 19:46
rabidbee What I would _like_ to see would be something like the rules in rugby, so that - as far as is possible - an attacking player is always entitled to take a quick free kick (from the correct place) and with the defenders ten yards away. OK, if you take it quickly then the defence might not have had time to retreat fully, but nevertheless the onus should be on them to immediately retreat ten yards as quickly as possible. If they do try to get back and the free kick hits them then there's nothing more they could do, and the attackers have wasted the opportunity. However, if the ball hits them and they haven't (in the ref's opinion) tried to retreat 10 yards then it should be another free kick, same situation. Deliberately trying to prevent a quick free kick - by standing in front of the ball, for instance, or by holding onto it - should be an automatic yellow card (as you might expect if a player charges out of a wall before a kick is taken).
And if a foul is committed in the box and your men don't have time to line up a wall, well diddums. Don't commit a foul in the box.
by rabidbee » 18 Feb 2010 19:55
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