by rhroyal » 29 Apr 2008 22:02
by Dirk Gently » 29 Apr 2008 22:05
by cmonurz » 29 Apr 2008 22:07
rhroyal Had Man Utd been trailing they would have needed 2 goals. Does that sound fair to you? I think not.
by Whore Jackie » 29 Apr 2008 22:47
by PlasticRoyale » 29 Apr 2008 23:12
by The whole year inn » 30 Apr 2008 02:31
rhroyal Is it me, or is this rule a shocking one? It leads to defensive, dull football which nobody wants. Home teams are always too scared to commit forward and take the game for fear of conceding an away goal, which makes the match more dull. Then consider how unfair it can be. Barcelona needed one goal to go through tonight. Had Man Utd been trailing they would have needed 2 goals. Does that sound fair to you? I think not. It's a ridiculous rule and should not exist, yet even more ridiculous is that I appear to be the only one who can see this.
by Tony Le Mesmer » 30 Apr 2008 11:32
by 1960 » 30 Apr 2008 13:37
by Platypuss » 30 Apr 2008 15:32
by Tony Le Mesmer » 30 Apr 2008 16:27
Platypuss A little pet peeve I have is when commentators wax about a "precious" away goal in a 1-0 first leg win.
Why does the fact that it was an away goal make any difference to who ultimately goes through?
by TBM » 30 Apr 2008 17:07
cmonurzrhroyal Had Man Utd been trailing they would have needed 2 goals. Does that sound fair to you? I think not.
I agree with your general point, but as the rule stands, it wouldn't be 'unfair' on United in your example, as they failed to score at the Nou Camp.
I don't think there is anything wrong with the away goals rule to separate teams in two-legged ties - it certainly beats penalties. What I don't like, however, is that the away goals rule stands into extra-time in this competition, effectively giving the away side in the second leg an additional 30 minutes to score a crucial away goal.
by RoyalChicagoFC » 30 Apr 2008 21:32
cmonurz I don't think there is anything wrong with the away goals rule to separate teams in two-legged ties - it certainly beats penalties. What I don't like, however, is that the away goals rule stands into extra-time in this competition, effectively giving the away side in the second leg an additional 30 minutes to score a crucial away goal.
cmonurzrhroyal Had Man Utd been trailing they would have needed 2 goals. Does that sound fair to you? I think not.
I agree with your general point, but as the rule stands, it wouldn't be 'unfair' on United in your example, as they failed to score at the Nou Camp.
I don't think there is anything wrong with the away goals rule to separate teams in two-legged ties - it certainly beats penalties. What I don't like, however, is that the away goals rule stands into extra-time in this competition, effectively giving the away side in the second leg an additional 30 minutes to score a crucial away goal.
by Skyline » 01 May 2008 11:41
cmonurz What I don't like, however, is that the away goals rule stands into extra-time in this competition, effectively giving the away side in the second leg an additional 30 minutes to score a crucial away goal.
by sheshnu » 01 May 2008 11:47
Platypuss A little pet peeve I have is when commentators wax about a "precious" away goal in a 1-0 first leg win.
Why does the fact that it was an away goal make any difference to who ultimately goes through?
by Tony Le Mesmer » 01 May 2008 12:42
sheshnuPlatypuss A little pet peeve I have is when commentators wax about a "precious" away goal in a 1-0 first leg win.
Why does the fact that it was an away goal make any difference to who ultimately goes through?
Because a 0-0 away means the team can't afford to concede any at home because then they'd have to score 2. It's just a cushion against your opponent scoring an away goal next week.
Out of interest is playing at home second actually an advantage historically or is this purely invented? Doubt anybody knows where to find info like that or indeed cares enough to do so but surely there must be something in it otherwise it'd be the other way around...
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