This is a silly argument to be in really, as there are ni satisfactory answers. So I'll simply show whg that is.
1. Managers, Directors, and scouts who go watch players live, don't solely watch those players live, they also watch videos of them. So asking 'why do they go to games if video viewing was better' is silly because it presumes they don't watch videos. Which they all do.
It's like asking why do business people also use bar charts for their presentations if pie charts were better. The answer is simple, because more ways of viewing the same thing is often better than fewer ways of viewing it. This though says little about which one is better.
2. If the question was which one is better for analysis, watching a game once at the stadium or the option of repetitive views on a video. Repetitive views on a video is better. And the reason has little to do with your view, and more to do with your ability to manipulate. Your ability to manipulate a video, pause it, rewind it, analyze short sections over and over, beats any ability to see the whole field once. Thus, in that respect video is better. And it's not even close.
3. You can use the same reasoning in point #1 to understand tactical cam. It's just like video, an additional way to view what's going on. Generally, you are more able to view the formation, and group movement of the players, how compactly they play e.t.c But most of this is apparent on a regular broadcast.
That said, I understand the emotional connection humans have with traditional ways of doing things. This connection though, is not proof of superiority.
You are totally missing the point, and I've only got to point 2. There is simply a huge difference between watching a game live and live on the tele.
There is no arguement to be had.
There's nothing to say watching on the TV afterwards doesn't give something extra.
But to compare watching a game through a camera at one angle compared to live is frankly second best.
It has nothing to do with emotion or traditionalism. The television companies are trying their best to replicate the live experience as you see more and the game is more visible.
Tactical cam is nothing like a video. It's not edited, it's not someone else's perspective. It's as close to being at the game as possible. The analysts use it as it shows the whole pitch, it doesn't just concentrate on the period of play.
I'm sorry, but this arguement is ridiculous, no doubt you'll be watching on the TV tonight.
So, I assume you'll be able to do the following,
See the movement players are making whilst Joe takes his run up for goal kicks? Nope. The camera will be panned straight on Joes dandruff free hair. The camera will not show anyone's efforts to find space. The camera will follow Joes run and ball strike. It will then follow the ball up field. The camera will fail to show the line the defence are holding, the movement they are offering, the positions they are taking. The camera will be concentrated on the man in possession and the bubble round him. The camera will follow the ball until posession is lost. Say a throw in, the camera will pan In on the thrower, making it impossible to see what players are doing out of shot. There won't be a reply to show what players out of shot were doing, no matter how many times you watch it, no matter how many times you re watch the game. Things out of shot will never be seen.
Do you now see the floor in your logic? The camera only shows aspects of the game. It can not possibly allow you the opportunity to digest the whole game. It is impossible, that's not an opinion, it's a fact.
The best example I can think of, Barcelona vs Chelsea, the camera is fixated on the Chelsea box, all the play is in 1 third of the field. Surely Barcelona must score. Suddenly Chelsea lump it forwards, there's no danger, oh hang on. There's Torres, no one could see him, he wasn't on screen, but yet he wins the game and we're left hearing Garry Chuckle orgasm. Now to this day, no one can answer weather Torres sprinted there, was he sat down on the half way? Was he chatting to the coach. No one knows, because it wasn't on camera. Do you know who does know how he got so free? That's right, those in the ground.
This is totally ridiculous. You can watch a game 100 times on TV, you'll still never see the shadow play, the positions ALL the players are taking up. You'll never see half the off ball positions.
This is Sky's footage of the Torres goal.
At no point in Barcelona's attack can you see Torres and at no point do they show how he got in such as position. Google as many views as you like, they will all be the same.