SebastianBlue
President, International Julian Alvarez Fan Club
- Joined
- 25 Jul 2009
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I agree with you on that but I unsure how it relates to my point about VAR implementation.I'd say not because Mane deliberately hits it at his arm.
I agree with you on that but I unsure how it relates to my point about VAR implementation.I'd say not because Mane deliberately hits it at his arm.
Thought I’d copy the new rule in full out:
Except for the above offences, it is not usually an offence if the ball touches a player’s hand/arm:
• directly from the player’s own head or body (including the foot)
So, last nights decision a correct implementation of the new law. Llorente’s against us would also have been disallowed
Sad, but true. There is no excuse for not being transparent in its operation, but they choose not toVAR will be nothing more than an additional tool used to ensure that whatever pre-determined outcome is required can be justified.
I agree with you on that but I unsure how it relates to my point about VAR implementation.
Oh, I was commenting about the Llorente handball.Think I mightbhave misinterpreted the third bullet point in 2nd section. Though does that mean as he played it off chest first it wouldn't be handball?
Except the bold bit which you ignored.
The old rule is far better than the new ones and next year will cause mayhem, it should be hand to ball not ball to hand.The original hand ball rule , was if an opponent moved his arm towards the ball , hence the saying "ball to hand" which was considered accidental , it now appears any contact with the arm or hand is now 95% nailed on penalty , which is ridiculous , players naturally put their arms out for balance etc., The rule needs to be reconsidered only deliberate hand ball i.e. a movement towards the ball to gain an advantage should be penalised.
Most worrying thing about this is that ‘expert’ referees and players are so eager to back the officials and the system that they ignore the rules. Ignorance of the rules is disgraceful but so, too, is the reluctance of those in the booth to question the referee. The ball hit his chest and then his arm so not a penalty. The referee presumably thought the ball had struck his arm first and that is a clear and obvious error. The decision should have been reviewed and overturned.
If they can make such mistakes in the biggest game in European football, Heaven help us in August.
The defender may consider himself very unlucky but it meets the conditions for a penalty set out by UEFA for this competition earlier in the season. In fact, I think it would have always been a penalty. His arm was in an unnatural position and he even brought it down to connect with the ball. All I can say is that if anyone can't see that was a penalty then after the first week of next season this thread will be a thousand pages long particularly if it involves a City player!
Assuming the rule quoted above and elsewhere online remains the pertinent one, “it is not usually an offence if the ball touches a player’s hand/arm:
• directly from the player’s own head or body (including the foot)” then it all depends whether the ball strikes another part of the defender’s body before striking his arm. Had the ball struck his arm directly, then a penalty no doubt, but the fact that it hit his body and then arm should have seen it deemed no penalty. The problem with this wording is the insertion of the word ‘usually’, as that leaves it entirely at the discretion and interpretation of the officials and, thus, subjective.
If we had VAR this season, would we have been champions.
Does it add or remove bias / error? Open to question
If we had VAR this season, would we have been champions.
Does it add or remove bias / error? Open to question
Of course they will, i’m Not looking forward to next season .Haven't seen the game, & never will, but from reading about the incident, it appears to fall in with what many of us predicted would happen, when it was announced.
The teams who get the most 'breaks' from refs, will get the most 'breaks' from v.a.r. & whenever a tight one goes against any of them, there will be such a public outcry that they don't lose a similar one for a long time.
Most 'close' v.a.r. decisions will go in favour of Utd & Liverpool next season.
I think the rule you are quoting is the one for next year although I think that a penalty would still be given. I think what the logical answer should be is that if his arm had been beside him then no penalty but to have your arm above your head and then bring it down making contact with the ball should logically be a penalty.