by tmesis »
29 Aug 2016 21:16
WAZZOCK The difference with rugby is that there is enough technology in rugby for players to trust the referee/touch judges/TMO decisions. The basis that contentious issues can be irrefutably looked at means their calls very rarely get questioned.
Football refs are getting let down by a lack of reasonable technology, and it gets completely blown out of proportion by over analysis from pundits .
...who more often than not don't know the rules of the game, which means you get quotes like...
"it has to be a red. He was the last man"
"That can't be a penalty. It was ball to hand"
"It has to be a handball. It deflected the shot away from the goal"
"No way is that a foul. He didn't even touch him"
Pundits seem incapable of grasping that refs have to give decisions by what the rule book says, not what Andy Townsend thinks the rule ought to be.
As for rugby, I think it's easier/less controversial normally because it's very difficult to trick a player into committing a foul, or make it look like someone has committed a foul when they haven't.
The controversy tends to come from technicalities. I remember a Irish v Harlequins game at the Madejski, which was won on the last phase of play in the game by try where a Harlequins players dropped the ball through his fingers in the corner, before dropping on the ball to score a try. Even he thought he'd knocked the ball on, and didn't really celebrate. The TV replay showed him dropping the ball, to cheers from the Irish fans, which turned to boos and the sort of shouts directed at football referees when he awarded the try. The technicality was that although he dropped the ball, he hadn't knocked it forwards, so it wasn't a knock-on. Try stands.