by Focher » 10 Aug 2010 11:55
by Royal Lady » 10 Aug 2010 12:12
Focher sorry to repeat a bit but the ref had absolutely no way of knowing that Thompson was onside when their player played the ball, irrespective of it hitting a Reading player. Although he made the correct call he was completely guessing and was very very lucky that he was right. He was piss poor all game for both teams.
by ZacNaloen » 10 Aug 2010 12:17
Royal LadyFocher sorry to repeat a bit but the ref had absolutely no way of knowing that Thompson was onside when their player played the ball, irrespective of it hitting a Reading player. Although he made the correct call he was completely guessing and was very very lucky that he was right. He was piss poor all game for both teams.
Yes he was. He wasn't right up with play in any case, was he?
by Man Friday » 10 Aug 2010 13:32
Focher sorry to repeat a bit but the ref had absolutely no way of knowing that Thompson was onside when their player played the ball, irrespective of it hitting a Reading player. Although he made the correct call he was completely guessing and was very very lucky that he was right. He was piss poor all game for both teams.
by TBM » 10 Aug 2010 13:38
Man FridayFocher sorry to repeat a bit but the ref had absolutely no way of knowing that Thompson was onside when their player played the ball, irrespective of it hitting a Reading player. Although he made the correct call he was completely guessing and was very very lucky that he was right. He was piss poor all game for both teams.
Good point. As a matter of interest, did he consult with the lino? (I can't remember.) If he didn't, he needs shooting as he was taking a major risk.
by Royal Lady » 10 Aug 2010 15:06
by Ferris » 10 Aug 2010 15:08
by Focher » 10 Aug 2010 15:13
Royal LadyFocher sorry to repeat a bit but the ref had absolutely no way of knowing that Thompson was onside when their player played the ball, irrespective of it hitting a Reading player. Although he made the correct call he was completely guessing and was very very lucky that he was right. He was piss poor all game for both teams.
Yes he was. He wasn't right up with play in any case, was he?
by Royal Lady » 10 Aug 2010 15:14
Ferris Wouldn't they have just communicated through their little headsets?
by Royal Lady » 10 Aug 2010 15:15
FocherRoyal LadyFocher sorry to repeat a bit but the ref had absolutely no way of knowing that Thompson was onside when their player played the ball, irrespective of it hitting a Reading player. Although he made the correct call he was completely guessing and was very very lucky that he was right. He was piss poor all game for both teams.
Yes he was. He wasn't right up with play in any case, was he?
how can you see an offside whilst standing on the pitch looking forward at the play?
by Hugo Boss » 10 Aug 2010 15:17
by Ferris » 10 Aug 2010 15:18
Royal LadyFerris Wouldn't they have just communicated through their little headsets?
Why do you see Refs walking over to his assistant sometimes then? Why don't they use their little headsets then? I'm just curious, not meaning to be argumentative.
by Hoop Blah » 10 Aug 2010 15:36
FerrisRoyal LadyFerris Wouldn't they have just communicated through their little headsets?
Why do you see Refs walking over to his assistant sometimes then? Why don't they use their little headsets then? I'm just curious, not meaning to be argumentative.
Dunno
by Man Friday » 10 Aug 2010 16:54
Hugo Boss Are people still going on about this??!!
by TBM » 10 Aug 2010 17:42
Royal Lady If that was the case TBM, why didn't the Ref explain that to the assistant referee who incorrectly flagged? It would be good to think that if a ref over rules his assistant, he might teach the assistant for the future, by explaining why.
by Royal Lady » 10 Aug 2010 17:53
TBMRoyal Lady If that was the case TBM, why didn't the Ref explain that to the assistant referee who incorrectly flagged? It would be good to think that if a ref over rules his assistant, he might teach the assistant for the future, by explaining why.
He probably did at half time.......no need to "teach" his assistant by stopping play for no reason. He probably indicated via the headset why he gave the decision - if the assistant had any issue with what the ref told him then he would have inform him to come over and discuss it further.
Refs go over and speak to their assistants when there is a disagrement, so the players/crowd/managers etc know something is being discussed...
by TBM » 10 Aug 2010 17:55
Royal LadyTBMRoyal Lady If that was the case TBM, why didn't the Ref explain that to the assistant referee who incorrectly flagged? It would be good to think that if a ref over rules his assistant, he might teach the assistant for the future, by explaining why.
He probably did at half time.......no need to "teach" his assistant by stopping play for no reason. He probably indicated via the headset why he gave the decision - if the assistant had any issue with what the ref told him then he would have inform him to come over and discuss it further.
Refs go over and speak to their assistants when there is a disagrement, so the players/crowd/managers etc know something is being discussed...
Well....you could argue there was a disagreement seeing as the assistant flagged for offside!
by coyrls » 10 Aug 2010 23:52
Focher sorry to repeat a bit but the ref had absolutely no way of knowing that Thompson was onside when their player played the ball, irrespective of it hitting a Reading player. Although he made the correct call he was completely guessing and was very very lucky that he was right. He was piss poor all game for both teams.
by glass half full » 11 Aug 2010 01:32
FerrisRoyal LadyFerris Wouldn't they have just communicated through their little headsets?
Why do you see Refs walking over to his assistant sometimes then? Why don't they use their little headsets then? I'm just curious, not meaning to be argumentative.
Dunno
by TBM » 11 Aug 2010 10:17
glass half full An arm raised in the Assistant's direction as acknowledgement should be enough but this seems to be seen more rarely recently.
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