deckoblue said:The Pink Panther said:I agree in principal with the article, however if Rooney points out to the ref that Kompany used two feet, Rooney is correct in that it is the ref that makes the decision and sends the player off.
When Balotelli was brought down at the swamp, a number of City players pointed out to Clattenburg that Mario was through on goal. I didn't hear any complaints that day
Wayne Rooney should not be making decisions for the ref.
Nor should he or any player be allowed to influence a refs decision.
If thats the case ,then the players should just ref it theirselves like kids on the park.
Bluekiwi said:That was the night that I started to really hate the scumbagspauldominic said:Chippy_boy said:I am not.
He says he has no problem with Johnson's tackle on Lescott. Clearly that is daft. By any interpretation of that challenge, it was a red card offense. To quote from the very article:
"Any player who lunges at an opponent in challenging for the ball from the front, from the side or from behind using one or both legs, with excessive force and endangering the safety of an opponent is guilty of serious foul play."
Serious foul play = red card.
He *clearly* endangered the safetly of an opponent in that had he been 10 milliseconds late he would have almost certainly injured Lescott and probably broken his leg, such was the speed and totally out of control nature of the challenge. You really cannot argue otherwise when a guy is flying in at full pelt, in the air with both feet off the ground like that.
OK so was Lescott hurt? No. Was his safety endangered? Damned right it was. In fact he was extremely lucky not to have been seriously injured.
To be honest I don't think Johnson or Kompany should have been sent off.
I have to go back to the Buchan tackle on Bell which ended his career. Why didn't Buchan get sent off that night?
That was serious foul play on a monumental scale.
eshiers1 said:On the subject of 2 footed tackles
I was at my local refs meeting last night, and as a city fan, queried the law regarding 2 footed challenges/automatic red card etc
While the law does not specifically say 'a 2 footed challenge = a red card' in all circumstances, in this day and age a ref will, 100% of the time, award a red card for a two footed challenge, assuming he sees it (Mr Mason)
The general idea is that a 2 footed challenge is inherently dangerous and unecessarily aggresive as a method to win the ball back which puts the opponant in much greater danger of being injured than a 'normal' tackle, following the laws of the game, earns you a red card.
Every one of the 30 refs present at the meeting (including me) agreed that the tackle, and Johnsons, were red card offences.
Up until 2 years ago, there was a line in the laws that if the ball was won cleanly, no foul could be awarded, but this has since been removed, this I think is where we've gone wrong. By removing this line I believe the powers that be are in the process of outlawing hard tackling from the game, it's a shame as a good hard tackle can get the crowd worked up more so than an attempt on goal.
My opinion on this matter, I disagree with the laws of the game as they currently exist, they're too 'soft' for the game, however as refs, we have no choice but to award a red card for such tackles, or ourselves face demotion etc.
jonmcity said:eshiers1 said:On the subject of 2 footed tackles
I was at my local refs meeting last night, and as a city fan, queried the law regarding 2 footed challenges/automatic red card etc
While the law does not specifically say 'a 2 footed challenge = a red card' in all circumstances, in this day and age a ref will, 100% of the time, award a red card for a two footed challenge, assuming he sees it (Mr Mason)
The general idea is that a 2 footed challenge is inherently dangerous and unecessarily aggresive as a method to win the ball back which puts the opponant in much greater danger of being injured than a 'normal' tackle, following the laws of the game, earns you a red card.
Every one of the 30 refs present at the meeting (including me) agreed that the tackle, and Johnsons, were red card offences.
Up until 2 years ago, there was a line in the laws that if the ball was won cleanly, no foul could be awarded, but this has since been removed, this I think is where we've gone wrong. By removing this line I believe the powers that be are in the process of outlawing hard tackling from the game, it's a shame as a good hard tackle can get the crowd worked up more so than an attempt on goal.
My opinion on this matter, I disagree with the laws of the game as they currently exist, they're too 'soft' for the game, however as refs, we have no choice but to award a red card for such tackles, or ourselves face demotion etc.
This is OK if for all and why we should be asking the FA to look at the Refs performance against liverpool.
While the law does not specifically say 'a 2 footed challenge = a red card' in all circumstances, in this day and age a ref will, 100% of the time, award a red card for a two footed challenge, assuming he sees it
baldmosher said:Not at all because Kompany was entirely in control of his tackle and knew he would get the ball before Nani. He took it with his instep. Nani knew Kompany would get the ball first which is why he pulled back and spun around to chase it. There was absolutely no contact with the player.
Johnson's was as bad as Taylor on Eduardo except Eduardo was a bit too quick for him.
sh249 said:Very good read.
Personally, I think you can go further in stating the differences between Rooney's and Mancini's respective conduct. As far as I could tell - and happy to be corrected on this - Mancini waved the imaginary card AFTER it became clear that Skrtel wasn't getting a red - i.e. in protest at the decision not to send him off (born of the frustration of having just seen Barry sent off for a nothing challenge - though that's no mitigation). There is simply no comparing this to a player, during the game, actively looking to influence a decision prior to it being taken.
A point which that second scouse **** Gerrard seems to have missed as well in his inane ramblings about Mancini last night.