halfcenturyup
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 12 Oct 2009
- Messages
- 12,414
So whilst not life saving like your examples, I stand by the public scrutiny makes the decision making immense. F*ck being a ref!
Referees have had shit thrown at them since the 60s when I first went to Maine Road, and presumably before. I am sure they have pretty thick skins.
I accept your point that there is more scrutiny now, which is exactly why the review process should be robust and systematic. Of course, fans and pundits will still disagree with some of their decisions but, at the very least, it needs to sound professional and under control, not the "two men in a pub" audio we had on the Onana incident, for example.
Exactly right. What we are discussing here isn't the law, which is pretty clear to me, it is how the law is interpreted by PGMOL. It seems in Germany they have a sensible interpretation. In the PL, they don't and it changes to suit the occasion.Strange discussion.
To evaluate if a player is offside by moving somehow and irritating the keeper, only that player must be looked at.
Not the keeper or his reaction (what if he has none?), not other players.
I don't assume German offside rules are different to PL's. Irritating the keeper in an offside position by a clear movement is very strictly seen as playing an active role and therefore he's offside.
A rule has to make some sense. And the sense in this case is, the keeper would have to wait and see if Akanji deflects the ball or not before deciding which way to jump. That's a disadvantage, and that shouldn't be the case when the player is in an offside position.