Dubaimancityfan wrote:I'm all for it, to at least review penalty/yellow card decisions (helps the ref decide which decision to take). I feel that some yellow cards are given to hastily in such situations.
It can also help on offside decisions, like the perfectly good goal Negredo scored recently and was ruled offside and the clear offside goal that Benzema scored last night ! The stakes could not been any higher than a World Cup spot decided by an offside goal (it's still not as bad as how France qualified for the last WC).
As mentioned by others, it has worked perfectly in other sports and as also said, I don't think it will disrupt the flow of the game that much.
budfox wrote:So Young falls over, might be a pen, might not.
Do we stop play for a review, or review it at the next natural stoppage? Neither works in my opinion.
In the first instance how do we restart? Drop ball in the box when the decision was 'no' thereby giving the attacking team an advantage if it had been cleared during normal play? Halfway line? What about if the attacking team still had great possession?
In the other instance, the next stoppage might be for a goal scored at the other end. Does that goal not stand? What about if a player from the team claiming a penalty collects a red card as the next natural stoppage? Would that be overruled?
I'm not opponent of technology, but I just can't see how it would work for penalty appeals.
Blue in the face wrote:I'm all for the technology. If a dive or foul cant be clearly proven then the refs decision would stand.
On the point of retrospective punishment for diving then in my opinion the offending divers club should be punished by a points deduction. Nothing less.
What's the point of a ban for a cheat if his team still gains from his actions? Just say Young played in the home match against utd in the year we won the premiership. He dives in our box and they score from the resulting penalty. We would have lost two points and as a result wouldn't have won the league.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:Blue in the face wrote:I'm all for the technology. If a dive or foul cant be clearly proven then the refs decision would stand.
On the point of retrospective punishment for diving then in my opinion the offending divers club should be punished by a points deduction. Nothing less.
What's the point of a ban for a cheat if his team still gains from his actions? Just say Young played in the home match against utd in the year we won the premiership. He dives in our box and they score from the resulting penalty. We would have lost two points and as a result wouldn't have won the league.
Too far imo. What if the penalty is missed and they lose the match anyway? It seems people only really care about diving in the box but it happens all over the pitch. Micah for example is one of the worst for this. We'd be fucked. Gives Young a run for his money with some of his dives. What if a player dives and no penalty is given?
Also what about defenders who dive when defending to try and win a free kick?
What about players who go down easy when there is a bit of contact?
One of our it's a very grey area and deducting points again would cause more problems then it would solve imo.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:Agree with that. Just can't see it working tbh.
And a ref could look at a decision 100 times and still be no clearer.
Wonderwall wrote:Bridge'srightfoot wrote:Agree with that. Just can't see it working tbh.
And a ref could look at a decision 100 times and still be no clearer.
If a decision is that difficult to call after seeing it 100 times then the original call stands.
You are really not getting the concept of how it will assist the game. I really dont understand the negativity when the advances made in cricket, rugby and tennis are there for all to see.
Wonderwall wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:Slomo is not an effective method of adjudicating penality decisions, as most people (including ex footballers & refs) are incapable of judging how much an impact matters or doesn't matter when viewed in slomo.
A constant which comes up in Ashley Young type situations is the 'expert' saying 'no never a pen, no chance' as you clearly see a defender trying to avoid contact by pulling his foot away after a genuine attempt to play the ball & a huge exaggerated jump by the forward, then we see the slomo: 'oh now I've seen that, yes, there is contact, the ref was right to give a pen there, well done '
No he isn't right. It was a dive, as you saw in real time. The slomo has just given a bad dive credence by showing 'contact'.
It will never work & just lead to more resentment from people like us, as the rag/scouse machine sitting watching a tv screen gives them even more favourable decisions than the refs have been doing.
totally disagree Ted, the way things work now are unacceptable, we are crying out for consistency. Technology can give it. There is no rule in the game that said there is not allowed to be contact, the interpretation needs to be clear for ALL and followed through with consistency, this way everyone gets a clear message and we are all on an even playing field. Maybe where a penalty is not awarded following a review, it should follow up with a yellow card if the review has shown the player to be simulating.
I am all for it and it is only a matter of time before something comes along, the money in the game is getting too big to be done in by a cheat.
Ted Hughes wrote:
There is no rule which says there can't be contact, but listen to Mark Halsey etc & they say "there was definitely contact, it's a penalty" even if the bloke is barely touched.
The so called 'contact' always looks worse in slomo, because you don't get the full stupidity & obviousness of the dive at that speed.
People were saying Ashley Young didn't dive v Sociedad, because the geezer touched his arm. They saw that on the slomo replay.
'When you see it again.....etc etc"
More pens will be given to cheats if replays are introduced; cheating will become legitimate.
Replays should only be used to show up divers, & the panel which judges that should come from outside the football industry, as that industry is full of cheats, ex cheats & people who are mates of cheats or employed by them.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:I agree that it's something which sounds like a good idea but It would have to be incorporated in the correct way imo.
But as someone else said,how do we decide when the appeal is made? There and then or after the next stoppage in play? But what if the next stoppage in play is a goal to the other team? But also where would it stop? As soon as you introduce replays for penalties, then the next time an incorrect free kick is given which results in a goal people will be asking for replays to extend to free kicks and then to corners and then to throw ins...
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:Then we may aswell just not have a referee and create a robot to referee or go one step further and play fifa 14 instead as Look Mum suggested.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:I do also think people enjoy the fact that football is MORE free flowing than other sports which use video replay. Sure it has its stoppages, but the more free flowing the better imo.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:If they can find a way of regulating it and implementing it then i'd consider, but imo there just appears to be too many holes in the proposal. For the time being at least.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:Wonderwal. You make a lot of good points.
However for me there would need to be a lot of issues sorted out first.
1.) It would need to be strongly regulated, otherwise every time Rags were losing a game, there would be about 15 'replays' needed in the last ten minutes of a game, making the game last hours.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:2.) A big issue here is how much discretion would the ref have? Should calling a replay be the last resort or used for every penalty decision? What if the ref is 80% sure? What if the ref calls it himself and gets it wrong? It would seem silly to refer every decision to a replay when there's some bleeding obvious ones.
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:3.) How would the challenge system work? Would they be allowed to appeal then and there? if they were teams may unsportingly use this to stop other teams quickly breaking. Or would it be the next stoppage of play? But as someone else said earlier, what if the next stoppage in play is a goal to the other team? Would that be disallowed?
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:4.) The subjectivity of penalties. Plenty of penalties could go either way, a replay many times doesn't clear anything up and the decision may not be any better then the one the referee would have given.
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