Further explanation.......
I have always had a bee in my bonnet about not breaking the Rules/Laws of a game. I never broke them on purpose. I have committed fouls but never in what they jokingly call the "professional" way. If they were professional about it they wouldn't do it.
My first game of football was in 1961, my last 11 v 11 was in 2007. Never carded. If a player was good enough to get past me with the ball then my job was to chase after him, get past him and either stall him or take the ball off him. It would never enter my head to purposely trip or rugby tackle an opponent who had just done me with skill and/or pace.
Old fashioned? Probably so but any win based on false play is, to me, an empty result.
Fine lines. Completely agree with Andy about the Trevor Chappell incident...on a par with Maradona and Neil Back for the ultimate in unsporting behaviour and probably worse because it was so premeditated, albeit by his brother.
On the other hand, still astonished that neither Olsson nor Vydra didn’t see fit to flatten that Leeds player who set up their second after the inept Palmer free kick. As a supporter I expected it...as a player...I know I wouldn’t have got close enough to tackle him but I would have brought him down, and been expected to.
MA...hand on heart...if an opposition player had a clear run on goal and the only way you could stop them would be by fouling them and taking the consequences...are you honestly saying you definitely wouldn’t?
46 year playing "career" and I never, ever brought anybody down on purpose. Often went in hard, was hardly ever put off balance in a shoulder to shoulder charge, they knew they had been tackled but within the Laws of the game.
I was late with a tackle on a couple of occasions but not by design.
"Taking one for the team" is a euphamism for cheating.
One Sunday League match, the ref gave us a penalty. I had fallen over. Running at full speed my left foot went into a 6 inch deep divot come pothole and I fell. I told the ref the guy hadn't touched me but he refused to change his mind. I took the penalty and put it 4 yards wide. We won.
I’d never have dived and certainly never have feigned injury - spent too much time trying to feign non injury - or intentionally injured anyone, but I’m afraid I was guilty of more than the odd trip.
Can’t actually believe the amount of shirt pulling and off the ball obstruction that players are getting away with in this World Cup.
Last edited by ramAnag; 18-06-2018 at 09:45 PM.
Wouldn't happen if I was reffing
I got done up like a kipper on more than a few occasions but almost always managed to get back and right my wrong before the player was able to cause any damage. Those that did go on to hurt us, well, their play deserved the end result. He was better than me in that one moment.
Burnley fan here, but read your forum on occasion. Phil and USGA have been at loggerheads for years regarding US Open set ups. USGA are scared to death scores will be low and set up the course accordingly. We all know USGA seem to think their Open is the best ‘major’, just as the US think everything in US is better than anywhere else.
Bottom line is Phil made his premeditated protest, USGA chose to invoke the lesser possible penalty. This was Phil being Phil, he’s got nothing to prove. Most other players would have been DQ’d, USGA has no gonads.
I have no connection to your club or area other than we’ve bought Hendrick from you in the past and, according to the rumour mill, we’re currently linked with your striker Vydra. I like to see what the other side is saying about such transfers and rumours. Also, Derby appear to start each season with high expectations and when setbacks occur, the “hire ‘em, fire ‘em” syndrome sets in. I thought you guys were on to something when Clement came in and did quite well, then apparently he had a tiff with the owner and left, it appears to be downhill since then. I always find this interesting, some of these owners just don’t ‘get it’.