by SteveRoyal » 28 Jan 2009 14:41
by Hoop Blah » 28 Jan 2009 14:42
LoyalRoyalFan There are however one or two things we could do to improve our game. We play far too much long ball. We struggled to put together two or three passes on the ground.
by Hoop Blah » 28 Jan 2009 14:45
facaldaqui This is part of Reading's secret. In some ways, what we do is very unorthodox. This team shows that there is worth in a half tackle, a quarter tackle, a flailing jostle, a toe in.....
by OLLIE KEARNS » 28 Jan 2009 14:47
Hoop BlahLoyalRoyalFan There are however one or two things we could do to improve our game. We play far too much long ball. We struggled to put together two or three passes on the ground.
Agreed on this point.
Our game is based on getting the ball forward with as little fuss as possible and making the forwards work the channels. We very rarely look to hold onto the ball and probe for an opening. That's great when teams can be steamrollered by our quality and hard work, but when they're made of sterner stuff, like Wolves, it comes undone.
In the second half we were crying out for someone to keep the ball and take the pressure off the back four for a while. Unfortunately thats not part of our game and so we kept giving back as usual.
It's worked for most of the season so fair play, I just think we'd have another string to our bow if we could keep the ball and kill off a game instead of having to battle it out so much as last night.
by M0J0 » 28 Jan 2009 14:53
by Deadlock » 28 Jan 2009 14:55
Hoop BlahDeadlockBlue&White Mage I'm guessing it was just me who thought the guy who tried to steal Kebe's shirt in the first half deserved a red, as no one else seems to have mentioned it. I thought the ref was shocking in parts and only seemed to start giving us decisions after he was bowled over by a wolves player
Certainly a case for Ward to be sent off there.
It was a cynical challenge yes, but I'm not sure how you could justify sending him off for it. Have a stab at it if you like though....
by loyalroyal4life » 28 Jan 2009 14:55
by Sun Tzu » 28 Jan 2009 14:57
DeadlockHoop BlahDeadlock Certainly a case for Ward to be sent off there.
It was a cynical challenge yes, but I'm not sure how you could justify sending him off for it. Have a stab at it if you like though....
"denying an obvious goal-scoring opportunity to an opponent moving towards the player’s goal by an offence punishable by a free kick or a penalty kick"
Then again, perhaps the ref knew Kebe's scoring record, and the "obvious goal-scoring opportunity" bit fails.
by Deadlock » 28 Jan 2009 14:58
by Sun Tzu » 28 Jan 2009 15:00
M0J0 I can't understand the logic of the Ref, how can he send a player off in the 93rd minute of a 94 minute game. I cannot imagine a scenario where i could justify a sending off at that stage of a very important game,
by Yahoops » 28 Jan 2009 15:06
M0J0 I can't understand the logic of the Ref, how can he send a player off in the 93rd minute of a 94 minute game. I cannot imagine a scenario where i could justify a sending off at that stage of a very important game, with players wasting as much time as they can and the other teams players anxious to get the ball up the other end, unless of course the said player nstead of swearing ,was to produce a machette or a machine gun and start attacking the linesman. no...I think a quiet word in his shell like would have been enough.
by Royal Monk » 28 Jan 2009 15:10
by Ian Royal » 28 Jan 2009 15:20
Hoop BlahDeadlockBlue&White Mage I'm guessing it was just me who thought the guy who tried to steal Kebe's shirt in the first half deserved a red, as no one else seems to have mentioned it. I thought the ref was shocking in parts and only seemed to start giving us decisions after he was bowled over by a wolves player
Certainly a case for Ward to be sent off there. What I thought was bizarre was in the second half when another Wolves player committed the same offence on NHunt we only got a free kick. There was also the bit where a Wolves player launched himself at Boris, which the ref initially gave us a free kick for, only to change his mind when he realised the Wolf had injured himself!?
I enjoyed the bit where the two Wolves players head-butted each other. Didn't enjoy missing the goal because I was one of the 200 or so still queueing at Gate 7 to get in.
It was a cynical challenge yes, but I'm not sure how you could justify sending him off for it. Have a stab at it if you like though....
I've no idea what the ref gave a freekick for for the challenge on Gunnarsson though and even less of an idea of why he changed his mind. He was only a couple of yards form the incident in the first place.
by M0J0 » 28 Jan 2009 15:21
by Ian Royal » 28 Jan 2009 15:27
M0J0 All i am saying is that in the great scheme of things abusing the linesman is hardly a sending off offence when the game is as good as over ,and many more serious incidents have gone totaly unpunished. and whilst it is under discussion i also think that awarding a penalty in the last few minutes of a game for an offence that is any less than a blatant ,deliberate handball or the like,is not a good thing.
i suppose what i am saying is that these inconsistant referees should use a bit of discretion and common sense. sometimes.
So in answer to some of the responses yes the time of an incident does make a difference to the response . If you don't agree ask gazza what he thinks. If the ref had warned him and even booked him when he commited his first foul in the FA cup final he may not have commited the second,which injured his knee so badly.
by T.R.O.L.I. » 28 Jan 2009 15:28
M0J0 If you don't agree ask gazza what he thinks. If the ref had warned him and even booked him when he commited his first foul in the FA cup final he may not have commited the second,which injured his knee so badly.
by Stranded » 28 Jan 2009 15:30
M0J0 All i am saying is that in the great scheme of things abusing the linesman is hardly a sending off offence when the game is as good as over ,and many more serious incidents have gone totaly unpunished. and whilst it is under discussion i also think that awarding a penalty in the last few minutes of a game for an offence that is any less than a blatant ,deliberate handball or the like,is not a good thing.
i suppose what i am saying is that these inconsistant referees should use a bit of discretion and common sense. sometimes.
So in answer to some of the responses yes the time of an incident does make a difference to the response . If you don't agree ask gazza what he thinks. If the ref had warned him and even booked him when he commited his first foul in the FA cup final he may not have commited the second,which injured his knee so badly.
by Silver Fox » 28 Jan 2009 15:41
M0J0 All i am saying is that in the great scheme of things abusing the linesman is hardly a sending off offence when the game is as good as over ,and many more serious incidents have gone totaly unpunished. and whilst it is under discussion i also think that awarding a penalty in the last few minutes of a game for an offence that is any less than a blatant ,deliberate handball or the like,is not a good thing.
i suppose what i am saying is that these inconsistant referees should use a bit of discretion and common sense. sometimes.
So in answer to some of the responses yes the time of an incident does make a difference to the response . If you don't agree ask gazza what he thinks. If the ref had warned him and even booked him when he commited his first foul in the FA cup final he may not have commited the second,which injured his knee so badly.
by M0J0 » 28 Jan 2009 16:03
StrandedM0J0 All i am saying is that in the great scheme of things abusing the linesman is hardly a sending off offence when the game is as good as over ,and many more serious incidents have gone totaly unpunished. and whilst it is under discussion i also think that awarding a penalty in the last few minutes of a game for an offence that is any less than a blatant ,deliberate handball or the like,is not a good thing.
i suppose what i am saying is that these inconsistant referees should use a bit of discretion and common sense. sometimes.
So in answer to some of the responses yes the time of an incident does make a difference to the response . If you don't agree ask gazza what he thinks. If the ref had warned him and even booked him when he commited his first foul in the FA cup final he may not have commited the second,which injured his knee so badly.
You must be on a wind up...
Foul & abusive language is a red card offence, the assitant ref gave him plenty of chances to shut up and move away - he didn't so he's off and it's his own stupid fault.
A ref will make a decision on what he sees regardless of it being the 9th or 99th minute, that's the way it should be and thankfully is...
No sod it, lets make the last 10 mins a free for all anything goes laughathon...
by BR2 » 28 Jan 2009 16:07
StrandedM0J0 All i am saying is that in the great scheme of things abusing the linesman is hardly a sending off offence when the game is as good as over ,and many more serious incidents have gone totaly unpunished. and whilst it is under discussion i also think that awarding a penalty in the last few minutes of a game for an offence that is any less than a blatant ,deliberate handball or the like,is not a good thing.
i suppose what i am saying is that these inconsistant referees should use a bit of discretion and common sense. sometimes.
So in answer to some of the responses yes the time of an incident does make a difference to the response . If you don't agree ask gazza what he thinks. If the ref had warned him and even booked him when he commited his first foul in the FA cup final he may not have commited the second,which injured his knee so badly.
You must be on a wind up...
Foul & abusive language is a red card offence, the assitant ref gave him plenty of chances to shut up and move away - he didn't so he's off and it's his own stupid fault.
A ref will make a decision on what he sees regardless of it being the 9th or 99th minute, that's the way it should be and thankfully is...
No sod it, lets make the last 10 mins a free for all anything goes laughathon...
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