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#51
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For the 6-second rule, the complaints about it seem to be something like when people complain for getting a ticket for doing 60 in a 55 zone because cops normally don't ticket people until they're 10 over. If you don't want to get called for the foul, don't commit it--acknowledging that you committed the foul and then complaining about the ref calling it just sounds pretty stupid.
For the hand ball--I had the match on my second TV muted, so it's possible I missed or misread something in the closed captioning, but I thought the commentators mentioned something about one of the Canadian players being known for "incidental" arm contacts on free kicks. If that's the case, then perhaps it may be a matter of a player with a reputation no longer getting the benefit of the doubt. (and that's one of the problems with replays--you could never use it to fix incorrect no-calls) |
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#52
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I am not someone who regularly follows soccer, but I have been led to understand that awarding an indirect free kick for violating the six-second rule essentially never happens at this level. Is this correct? Does anyone know the last time it happened in a high-level soccer game?
I have no problem in general with refs following rules, but I do have a problem with selective enforcement. A tense moment in an Olympic semifinal seems hardly the right place to begin putting one's foot down if it has essentially never happened in the last twenty years or whatever. |
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#53
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Ah, yes indeed. I was referring to the Brazil match, should have mentioned that.
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#54
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Beyond that missed call, what in the match constituted "terrible officiating"? |
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#55
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#56
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It is one of those rules that constantly get broken and the referee overlooks as being picky about everything ruins the flow of the game. As another example: where a team takes a free kick, throw in etc. In theory it is supposed to be where the ball went out/incident happened but in practice it is just done somewhere vaguely near where it should be. Often it is nowhere close. A poor referee is insistent that it be taken at exactly the right place and would be criticised for being pedantic. |
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#57
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Ball goes out of play somewhere at the half line. Player goes and picks up the ball, moving about 5 yards closer to the opponent's goal, making a motion as if to throw it. When really, he's not the throw-in man; he's just waiting for another teammate to come and get it. Player sees his teammate approaching, so he drops the ball, about 2 or 3 yards closer to the opponent's goal. Teammate comes up, picks up the ball, side-shuffles up the line closer to the opponent's goal, as he tries to find someone to throw it to. Spots someone, then does a little run-up to get maximum distance on the throw. Really, I've seen players move up 10-15 yards and waste about 30 seconds. That's not counting Rory Delap from Stoke City (EPL), who is actually allowed to wipe down the ball with a towel and release the ball illegally. As for the rest, I don't think there was some grand conspiracy for the US to win that game. And I don't agree with any Canadian player/coach writing in to Sepp Blatter. He was the one who suggested a way to improve women's soccer was to get them to wear tighter shorts. He doesn't give a shit, implying there is a shit to be given here. There were bad/missed calls on both sides. The IFK is getting all the talk because it is so unusual. I could not believe it when I saw it, and I watch about 60 games a season. I have seen handballs miscalled or not called. I have seen player infractions (the stomp, an elbow, etc.) not called. But I have never seen time-wasting called for an IFK. It was bizarre. |
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#58
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Why is stalling such a concern in soccer? Can't the referee just add stoppage time to compensate for stalling?
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#59
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Yeah, but the rule is there to keep the game moving, not just about time.
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#60
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As for time wasting, keepers still get away with huge gobs of it when taking goal kicks. They act like golf-players getting ready for a championship putt -- just "finding" and teeing-up the ball can take 5-10 seconds. The bookings-to-infractions ratio is ridiculous. |
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#61
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As a comparison for those who don't watch a lot of soccer, its 6-second rule is called about as often as this (and violated about as often, too).
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If a world series game hinged on an umpire calling rule 8.04 for ball four, you'd see about the same level of outrage. Good review, including language on how referees are instructed to interpret the six-second rule, at the NYT: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/08/sp...pagewanted=all I didn't see the game, but this is pretty out-there to call without a warning. Reports on warnings are mixed: the Canadian keeper says she got a vague mention at half time nothing more, the referees father says there were multiple warnings (how does he know?) and a U.S. player claims the referee gestured several times to speed things up and the keeper acknowledged it. Anybody (who, you know doesn't have a vested interest in having the U.S. seen as winning fairly) see these gestures/acknowledgements? However, the only complaints I've seen regarding the referee are this call, the subsequent handball, and a similar handball not called on the U.S. (and some complaints that the ref let the Canadians get away with very physical play). So, pretty weak evidence for anything intentional. Sounds like the referee let herself get a little bullied into calling the six seconds without enough firm warnings (a definite poor refereeing decision), but it was just a mistake, not a deliberate throwing the game (especially given it sounds like she could have been yellow and red carding Canadians more if she was inclined). |
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#62
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Last edited by Lazy; 08-08-2012 at 11:11 AM. |
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#63
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#64
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The main difference between the baseball rule and this, of course, is that you cannot win a game by having the pitcher slow his delivery. Canada could have won by running out the clock.
I don't really get why people think it's bad form to count out how long the keeper was holding the ball. |
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#65
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To be fair, I've never seen cheese, wounded or unwounded, flop around.
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#66
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Showing a little good will to the ref, we can assume it was incompetence, or maybe being swayed by one of her soccer heroes standing beside her counting out loud, and not deliberate bias. But it is understandable that it feels like that to the Canadians. |
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#67
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The more I read about the delay of game call, the more bullshitty it is. The NY Times ran an article today with references from USA Soccer's writing and interpretations for referees, and referees noting that the universal interpretation of the six second rule is completely at odds with Pederson's application of it in that 1. Formal warning is always given first, not a vague "I told this other refe to mention to you to speed things up," and 2. The six seconds are not supposed to begin the moment the goalkeeper gets the ball; they're supposed to begin when the goalie has moved into position and begun looking for someone to get the ball to, and even then it's not a hard and fast rule. As USA Soccer logically points out, you can't apply a six second rule from the moment of catching the ball or else you'd be penalizing every goalie who had to dig him/herself out of a pile or collect themselves after hitting the ground. Quote:
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#68
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No, the way it works in the real world is that, if you don't enforce a rule, then, for all intents and purposes, that rule doesn't exist. To suddenly enforce a rule that you previously had been letting slide is to essentially create a new rule. And, honestly, it smacks very much of judges who are partial. And I didn't even follow this game (no cable/HD receiver), and haven't read closely enough to figure out whether fixing this would help the U.S. or Canada. I don't care. An unfair sports competition might as well not take place. |
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#69
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It's like the speed limit is 65, and everyone drives 70 and doesn't get pulled over. Then one person drives 100, is warned several times, and people write letters to the police chief saying "WTF? This is dangerous!?" The person gets pulled over and complains that the rule is never enforced so it's not fair. |
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#70
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#71
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Refs absolutely don't count down until they're going to give a free kick. An indirect free kick is the correct penalty, if one is given, that's not in dispute by anyone. Yes, a warning or warnings are usually given. The keeper acknowledges at least one and we have reports of motioning as more non-verbal warnings (extremely common). We also know she held the ball for significantly longer than 6 seconds on several occasions. It's an unusual call, sure. That doesn't mean anyone was at fault. I actually tend to think the PK was pretty damn iffy. That being said, what's her face stomped on Carli Lloyd's head. Fuck 'em. |
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#72
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I don't have the game recorded; I'm interested in knowing how long Hope Solo held on to the ball throughout the game. |
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#73
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Just for a bit of perspective, here is the opinion of Scott Murray at The Guardian
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managed to track down a single instance from 10 years ago: Quote:
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#74
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According to several sources she was warned several times, not all warnings are verbal. An off the field warning absolutely 100% is a valid warning. Why wouldn't it be? It's not like there's an official warning system and log book. |
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#75
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#76
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#77
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Why wouldn't an off-field warning not count? Because, in the interest of information for all players, both teammates and opponents, as well as coaches, the referee should issue a warning on the pitch, so it doesn't become an issue of she said/she said. It also gives coaches an opportunity to discuss the player's actions with the player. That way, it doesn't come as a complete shock to the team when the player gets carded/sent off/gets penalized for time-wasting later in the game. |
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#78
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When you're ahead in a critical game, that is not the time to think "Hmmm, the opposing team is making it explicitly clear to the ref that I am violating rules that can have disastrous consequences if I get caught, but they never call that so I'll keep doing it." It's the time to think "Hmmm, maybe I shouldn't give the ref any excuse to call anything, the risk of an IDK in the goal area isn't worth 10 seconds extra off the clock." |
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#79
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A warning for time-wasting from the ref is very common though - any keeper holding on to the ball at the end of a tight game gets this, see it all the time. The next step is really rare because most keepers aren't stupid enough to blatantly take the piss in this situation. Last edited by Busy Scissors; 08-09-2012 at 05:59 AM. |
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#80
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The point isn't that she was called on it; the point is she was punished by a rule of game that hasn't been used in about 10 years. |
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#81
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a) the referee's father; and b) the U.S. player who bullied the referee into making the call. If you have more, um, neutral sources, I'd be interested to hear their statements. Anyway, the analogy is not being busted for speeding; it's being busted for one of those archaic 18th century laws that Ripley's trots out on occasion; Exercising a Beast on the Sabbath or something. |
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#82
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Stupid question: Why don't they just add the time the goalie holds on to the ball or whatnot as stoppage time?
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#83
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Every great player is on the ref. Michael Jordan did it, Wayne Gretzky did it. Christine Sinclair, the Canadian captain, was on the ref all game; barely a call when by that she wasn't barking at the ref about it. It's part of sport. Abby Wambach did nothing wrong in lobbying the ref for a call, though even she was probably surprised they got an IFK; the usual result is a warning and then a yellow card. The ref screwed up. If you can let a captain lobbying for a call not only get you to make the call but to forget how it's customarily applied, you're not a good ref. I'm sorry to make this point again, but as much as I think Canada got screwed big time, the American players are not in any way at fault. They're out there representing their country, charged with trying to win a soccer game, and they should do everything within the bounds of the rules and customary sportsmanship to win the game. Lobbying the ref, especially if you are the designated captain in such sports as recognize that position, is customarily within the bounds of sportsmanship. And yeah, the speeding ticket metaphor is starting to break down. |
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#84
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I have no conceptual problem with changing the rules to match what you think should have been done so as to remove any future doubt, but in the context of the debate for this particular call, it's really goalpost-moving. |
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#85
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Stuff like that. Additionally, clock control is rather lax in football. I believe in each half of 45 minutes that ball is usually in play for 27-30 minutes or so. Picking and choosing which delays to add on to the end would cause all sorts of arguments, so the fourth official usually just picks a number that "feels" right. Football also has an (in my opinion flawed) idea that the game should be officiated in the same way at all levels, which for a long time was one of the main arguments why television replays should not be allowed. Not every game at every level has the facility for as close clock watching as say, the World Cup, Olympics or the English Premier League. |
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#86
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The usual punishment is a card for the goalie yet the goalie keeps the ball. Interesting. |
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#87
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#88
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The coach's job, too. Working the refs isn't entertaining and nobody likes to watch it, but it's part of sports. Players and coaches (and even owners and fans) will try to draw a ref's attention to a particular violation to try to increase their chances of getting a call. It's not bullying and it's not even unethical.
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#89
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The usual call is not the keeper getting a yellow and keeping the ball. That is for a delay of game, usually on a goal kick. It's a different, albeit similar, penalty. |
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#90
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On a related-sort-of note, after watching the bronze medal game and now watching the gold medal game between the USA and Japan, I must conclude this is much better entertainment than the men's World Cup. Still not a single dive in evidence.
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#91
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The foul is called all the time. The punishment is not. |
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#92
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Uh, pretty much this entire thread has been talking about how rare this call is, how it's only been called once in 10 years, etc.
The only cite given so far for this situation clearly spells out a IDK for this infraction. So I see two possible cases that you're talking about 1) This foul is called very often, but the refs tend to give out a punishment that is completely different than what's in the rulebook. 2) You're talking about some completely different rule than most everyone else on the thread, and this other rule has a yellow card as punishment, and is constructed in such a way that one particular infraction is equally in violation of two different rules with two different punishments. Both of these cases would be problems with the FIFA rules committee, bit not a problem for the ref officiating this particular game. |
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#93
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I've come to the view that I just don't know enough about soccer to have an opinion on the appropriateness of the IDFK call.
However, saying "you can't complain, it's in the rulebook, even if they don't usually call it" is BS. If it's never called (or if it's called, but with a different penalty - remember, this is the part I officially take no position on due to ignorance on my part) then issuing the by the book penalty is, or at least can be, unfair. An analogy: It's game 7 of the NBA finals and the Bulls trail by 1 with mere seconds on the clock. Michael Jordan drives the lane and rolls the ball into the net. The whistle blows just as the buzzer sounds. Traveling is called, basket disallowed, Bulls lose. Of course, the call is technically correct, but every single Jordan layup in the game and about 90% of those made by other players were technically traveling too, and not a single traveling call had been made. Disallowing that basket is a travesty of officiating even though it's entirely by the book. |
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#94
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The call/punishment, not the foul. The call/punishment: an idk for time-wasting The foul: Time-wasting. You said: Quote:
As an aside, I should withdraw the Alonso/Ramos analogy, because they aren't goalkeepers. |
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#95
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Basically it is the same as the 1972 USA USSR basketball game. Officiating overshadowing the game itself. Happens a lot in sport, always a shame when it does.
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#96
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What happened here is a different foul, covered by a different rule, than that of a goalkeeper stalling while waiting to take a goal kick, yes? (Snarky_Kong pointed this out, but I think it needs to be reiterated.)
Possibly the biggest distinction is that while waiting for a goal kick to be taken, the ball is dead. "Delaying the restart of play" is one of the seven itemized violations listed as "Cautionable offences" in the Laws of the Game. No other sanctions are listed: the player gets the yellow card, and then whatever restart was being delayed is tried again. What happened here was not "delaying the restart of play" because play was not stopped - the ball was live. There are a lot of things listed in the Laws calling for a indirect free kick, and the very first one is Quote:
I think many people in this thread are trying to draw an equivalency between the two cases that just isn't supported by the rules. While superficially similar, stalling while taking a goal kick and hanging onto the ball for too long are not the same foul, and warrant different punishments. |
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