TheBeautifulGame
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 Oct 2022
- Messages
- 532
^^Great point about retrospective punishment. The obsession over dives in football is maddening, because genuine dive actors are an exceedingly rare thing. What annoys me is when a player may embellish a situation and fall to the ground more easily than maybe he otherwise would have if he wasn't trying to convince a ref that he was fouled, and you have fans trying to act like he "dove" as if he's just completely pretending that he was fouled. Generally players don't go down unless there's something that caused him to go down. There's exceptions of course, but those exceptions have always been very rare. And there's an art to embellishing fouls a tad without overdoing it. And slight to moderate embellishing doesn't mean it's not a foul.And let's not forget diving could have been stamped out with retrospective punishment without the need for in-match VAR.
But you're right, post-match suspensions and/or fines for those who are shown to have pretended to fall when there genuinely wasn't contact or only very slight would serve the sport well. That would not include falling due to stepping on someone foot. If someone was suspended or fined post-match, it would affect their reputation moving forward and referees would be on the lookout for more faking from a player who was caught going down on his own volition and punished post-match. But that's a far cry from what happened to Mbappe there, who is being accused of diving as a means to make it seem like VAR corrected a wrong decision, when in reality it wasn't a dive and a penalty would have been very acceptable in the situation. Maybe a bit harsh you could say but certainly not without reason. To not call penalty is also acceptable for a variety of reasons, one, having his foot stepped on is inadvertent contact, enough to bring Mbappe down but on its own not a foul, then there's the subjectivity of whether or not the holding would have prevented Mbappe from getting to the ball, which apparently was the critical pice of the puzzle that went into the decision. But even that's a slippery slope because there's been plenty of stonewall penalties in which the ball was *borderline* out of reach, and the ball being *possibly* out of reach doesn't stop it from being a penalty, if there was severe contact. It seems that whether or not the ball is subjectively determined (guesswork) to be out of reach is only considered when the contact (possibly foul) is only very minor or slight. The criteria that goes into such a decision is quick fickle and random it seems.