daztrueblue91
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 4 Jun 2009
- Messages
- 4,229
I'm not talking nonsense. I'm making very salient points it's just that you see it differently. We agree that his arm was outside the area and it should have been a free kick. No argument there. It's a matter of whether it would be deserving of a red card. The VARs didn't think so apparently for whatever reason. If their reasoning was that they didn't think it was a DOAGSO then that logic is problematic because I do agree with ya'll that it clearly was. And I know what that is supposed to mean. All I'm saying is that I can sympathize with the keeper being so close to the edge of the box. I don't think his well thought out "intent" was to commit a handball. He was trying to get back into the box before swatting it and in that moment instincts kicked in.
So I can't conclude that it was a "deliberate" handball due to the fact that he did well enough to get his body back into the box before swatting it. Still a foul, still should have been a free kick, maybe even a card. I'm not just comfortable sending him off like that. But that's just me. That's just my interpretation of it giving the benefit of the doubt to the keeper. As far as a defender making a tackle being a natural thing to do, yeah sure, but in order for a tackle to not to be a foul, he can't contact the defender. He needs to be "playing the ball" in order to avoid committing a foul let alone being booked. So trying to equate tackling to a keeper swatting a ball is a but much. Both can be natural acts but there are ways in which you can do it legally and ways in which you can't. In the keeper's case, it was simply where he was whilst doing what he did, vs a tackle which he could only be red carded if he completely misses the ball and actually takes his guy out.
That is why you are not making a salient point. Everything else you point out is irrelevant.
For a keeper to legally swat the ball away it needs to be inside the box. It really is as simple as that.
What you’re actually arguing is that you’d have sympathy for the keeper if he’d have been sent off, as he got his bearings wrong rather than a malicious act. That still does not mean the VAR made the correct decision.