by PlasticRoyale » 28 Jun 2010 11:30
by Gordons Cumming » 28 Jun 2010 12:10
by Dirk Gently » 28 Jun 2010 12:26
by Royal Lady » 28 Jun 2010 13:01
by 6ft Kerplunk » 28 Jun 2010 13:15
Dirk Gently When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
by Hoop Blah » 28 Jun 2010 13:53
by paultheroyal » 28 Jun 2010 13:54
Dirk Gently Yes to anything that gives an instant notification to the ref. Hawkeye, as tested at Hogwood, gave the ref a buzz within 0.5 seconds of the ball crossing the line.
But a big NO to anything that stops play or takes it back - and here's why. After yesterday's incident, the ball was cleared and Germany were immediately on the attack, and within 30 seconds of the ball bouncing behind their goalline they'd had a shot themselves on the England goal. What if that had gone in?
When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
by Hoop Blah » 28 Jun 2010 13:56
by Flyingkiwi » 28 Jun 2010 14:01
Royal Lady Their cheating goalie knew it was over the line. I couldn't believe how he just carried on as though he'd caught it before it went over the line.
Gordons Cumming From Wikipedia:-
"In the early 1970s, Blatter was elected president of the World Society of Friends of Suspenders, an organisation who tried to stop women replacing suspender belts with pantyhose."
HTH
by Dirk Gently » 28 Jun 2010 14:07
paultheroyalDirk Gently Yes to anything that gives an instant notification to the ref. Hawkeye, as tested at Hogwood, gave the ref a buzz within 0.5 seconds of the ball crossing the line.
But a big NO to anything that stops play or takes it back - and here's why. After yesterday's incident, the ball was cleared and Germany were immediately on the attack, and within 30 seconds of the ball bouncing behind their goalline they'd had a shot themselves on the England goal. What if that had gone in?
When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
TV replays are a must for tournament football - goal line decisions only. Any issue with ball over the line - whistle is immediately blown - this then answers Dirks point and prevents further controvesy. Replay is looked at, decision is made - either a goal is awarded, or a goal kick to the defending team - job done.
by brendywendy » 28 Jun 2010 14:46
6ft KerplunkDirk Gently When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
You play on until the ball is next out of play. By that point the 5th official has probably had time to see the footage anyway. Or if teh 5th official has had a chance to see the footage before the ball is out of play he lets the ref know it was a goal.
by royal tee » 28 Jun 2010 14:51
Dirk GentlypaultheroyalDirk Gently Yes to anything that gives an instant notification to the ref. Hawkeye, as tested at Hogwood, gave the ref a buzz within 0.5 seconds of the ball crossing the line.
But a big NO to anything that stops play or takes it back - and here's why. After yesterday's incident, the ball was cleared and Germany were immediately on the attack, and within 30 seconds of the ball bouncing behind their goalline they'd had a shot themselves on the England goal. What if that had gone in?
When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
TV replays are a must for tournament football - goal line decisions only. Any issue with ball over the line - whistle is immediately blown - this then answers Dirks point and prevents further controvesy. Replay is looked at, decision is made - either a goal is awarded, or a goal kick to the defending team - job done.
So by stopping play you've denied Germany the chance to attack on the break. Football isn't a series of individual plays like tennis or cricket, it's a continuously evolving narrative. You can't just stop it at will - and if you did, who decides when you stop it? If you let a team appeal or challenge, that'll just be used by some as a means to stop an attack against them.
by Messiah » 28 Jun 2010 14:55
Dirk Gently Yes to anything that gives an instant notification to the ref. Hawkeye, as tested at Hogwood, gave the ref a buzz within 0.5 seconds of the ball crossing the line.
But a big NO to anything that stops play or takes it back - and here's why. After yesterday's incident, the ball was cleared and Germany were immediately on the attack, and within 30 seconds of the ball bouncing behind their goalline they'd had a shot themselves on the England goal. What if that had gone in?
When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
by 6ft Kerplunk » 28 Jun 2010 15:02
brendywendy6ft Kerplunk You play on until the ball is next out of play. By that point the 5th official has probably had time to see the footage anyway. Or if teh 5th official has had a chance to see the footage before the ball is out of play he lets the ref know it was a goal.
what if the other team go up the other end and score before the ball goes dead?what if the same team score again?
by paultheroyal » 28 Jun 2010 16:06
Dirk GentlypaultheroyalDirk Gently Yes to anything that gives an instant notification to the ref. Hawkeye, as tested at Hogwood, gave the ref a buzz within 0.5 seconds of the ball crossing the line.
But a big NO to anything that stops play or takes it back - and here's why. After yesterday's incident, the ball was cleared and Germany were immediately on the attack, and within 30 seconds of the ball bouncing behind their goalline they'd had a shot themselves on the England goal. What if that had gone in?
When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
TV replays are a must for tournament football - goal line decisions only. Any issue with ball over the line - whistle is immediately blown - this then answers Dirks point and prevents further controvesy. Replay is looked at, decision is made - either a goal is awarded, or a goal kick to the defending team - job done.
So by stopping play you've denied Germany the chance to attack on the break. Football isn't a series of individual plays like tennis or cricket, it's a continuously evolving narrative. You can't just stop it at will - and if you did, who decides when you stop it? If you let a team appeal or challenge, that'll just be used by some as a means to stop an attack against them.
by handbags_harris » 28 Jun 2010 16:16
MessiahDirk Gently Yes to anything that gives an instant notification to the ref. Hawkeye, as tested at Hogwood, gave the ref a buzz within 0.5 seconds of the ball crossing the line.
But a big NO to anything that stops play or takes it back - and here's why. After yesterday's incident, the ball was cleared and Germany were immediately on the attack, and within 30 seconds of the ball bouncing behind their goalline they'd had a shot themselves on the England goal. What if that had gone in?
When would you look at the replay? Would you stop play immediately and deprive Germany of the chance to attack? Or would you take away the "goal" they'd scored - which might have been the best goal in the history of football?
If we're talking goal line technology then it wouldn't be used that often. These 'no goals' don't happen often, so you stop play immediatley and less than 30 seconds later a decision is clarified and play can resume.
If it happened every game then I'd agree with your point about it stopping an apposition breakaway.
by Gordons Cumming » 28 Jun 2010 17:11
by SLAMMED » 28 Jun 2010 17:19
Gordons Cumming I'm against the use of technology because if it had been in use for a few years we'd have lost to Watford 1-2.
by Super_horns » 28 Jun 2010 17:24
by SLAMMED » 28 Jun 2010 17:26
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