FightLikeAGirl
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 29 Apr 2019
- Messages
- 3,785
- Team supported
- Everton
Goalies fucking around with the ball is tiresome. Just kick/throw it and shut up.
No chance a pie would stay on the deck 6 seconds with that hoover anywhere near it.Luke Shaw uses the six second rule, but only for a dropped pie.
I was just about to post the same. He was a master at wasting time.Tim Howard likes this thread
It'd hit him on the back of the head.No chance a pie would stay on the deck 6 seconds with that hoover anywhere near it.
It wouldnt actually landNo chance a pie would stay on the deck 6 seconds with that hoover anywhere near it.
The way to deal with that is the concussion rule, player has to go off for 10 mins but you can bring a sub on but when that sun goes off he cannot be used again. You can still have 5 subs but as many concussion subs as you want but those players can only be used once and then can’t take part again, Everton would be sending on the reserve keeper after 15 mins.Yep just look at how players and coaches are already exploiting a player safety issue like the new head injury protocols for their own dishonest ends. Go down clutching your head to stop a breakaway.
Should be VAR and a red card
No chance. The pie would have hit him on the back of the head before it hit the floor.Luke Shaw uses the six second rule, but only for a dropped pie.
His nickname on Grand Old Team was Star Jumps.I was just about to post the same. He was a master at wasting time.
I don't think that has sense. What if they level in the last second? Would it go back to 90 minutes again?I've got a better idea. Definitely tot up time wasting by each time then, if one team is losing, reduce normal time by the amount of wasted time. So if Villa wasted 5 minutes in that last game, call time at 85 minutes.
Or let the trainer on whilst play continuesThe sensible thing to deal with traditional time wasting is, as many have said, a rugby style independent timekeeper.
However, I see more and more a new kind of time wasting creeping into the game. This is the type practiced by Arsenal and other teams to either provide a ‘tactical timeout’ or to break up the rhythm of an opponent that is playing well.
This is where the keeper drops on the ground and the physios come on giving Arteta a few minutes to coach his team on the hour mark. The purpose isn’t to actually waste time per se (although the effect for spectators is the same), so the guarantee of time getting added on at the end won’t stop it. The only way this could be stopped is for play to simply carry on for any occasion when players are injured, even if it’s a goalkeeper or two centre backs.
Perhaps football should just bite the bullet and give teams two tactical timeouts they can use during a match like in Yankee sports. At least that way you’d know it is within the rules and limited in length and frequency.
The sensible thing to deal with traditional time wasting is, as many have said, a rugby style independent timekeeper.
However, I see more and more a new kind of time wasting creeping into the game. This is the type practiced by Arsenal and other teams to either provide a ‘tactical timeout’ or to break up the rhythm of an opponent that is playing well.
This is where the keeper drops on the ground and the physios come on giving Arteta a few minutes to coach his team on the hour mark. The purpose isn’t to actually waste time per se (although the effect for spectators is the same), so the guarantee of time getting added on at the end won’t stop it. The only way this could be stopped is for play to simply carry on for any occasion when players are injured, even if it’s a goalkeeper or two centre backs.
Perhaps football should just bite the bullet and give teams two tactical timeouts they can use during a match like in Yankee sports. At least that way you’d know it is within the rules and limited in length and frequency.