Jump to content
talkfootball365
  • Welcome to talkfootball365!

    The better place to talk football.

Inverted

Member
  • Posts

    4,809
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Posts posted by Inverted

  1. I think theres probably some wording in the guidance that VAR for challenges needs to show them in normal speed if the point is to determine force/dangerousness. 

    Which I don't think was the case on the Jones' footage which was played back. It's debatable if it would have made a difference but again its a question of whether the refs are even sticking to their own procedures or making it up as they go along.

  2. I'm not saying there is bribery in the PL but I do not remotely understand the argument that football is too unpredictable to be corrupted.

    I mean it might be in a sense true that football is too random to be manipulated with absolute reliability but that has certainly not stopped there from being countless cases of refereeing corruption worldwide since basically forever. 

    And even if the end results are extremely hard to manipulate, you can certainly tip the scales, or at least secure certain outcomes - number of bookings, who gets booked, who scored first, etc.

     

  3. It has almost gotten to a point where its more tinfoil hat territory to suggest that nothing is wrong.

    The PL is not only awash with billions of pounds and huge financial incentives for everyone involved, but is increasingly a geopolitical football subject to interference both from the UK and foreign governments. The stakes involved and the forces exerted on the competition are enormous. 

    The idea that a very chummy and insular group of barely competent refs, who spend half their time flying around the globe hawking their services to the highest bidder, who are accountable to noone, and who vigorously resist any kind of transparency which is common in other sports, can be trusted to safeguard it seems increasingly naive.

  4. If its a "significant human error" tell us the human or humans.

    If I make a mistake in my job I get pulled front of a disciplinary tribunal. A girl I worked with got sacked last week for making mistakes. 

    Why are refs so completely insulated from any consequences of their mistakes? Release their names, let's have their explanations of how the "mistakes" happened and let them suffer the consequences like men. 

    • Like 1
  5. I think fundamentally most dog bites/attacks fall into two categories

    (i) highly aggressive but ultimately not physically powerful enough to be dangerous to a human

    (ii) physically powerful but can be warded-off with a moderate amount of resistance.

    Most dog breeds, and most animals generally, do not want to get themselves killed or injured. Even when showing extreme aggression. A sufficient amount of pain or intimidation will get most dogs to give up long before they or someone else is seriously injured. The issue with pitbulls and especially XL Bullys is that they have the strength to kill and absolutely no sense of self preservation.

    Once they have prey in sight they will keep going until the prey is killed/maimed, they find another target, or they are physically incapable of keeping going. I've seen them get kicked by horses, sprayed with bear spray, or even shot, and they will not give up.

  6. 20 hours ago, 6666 said:

    Is it weird that I always thought Antony always had the look of someone with anger issues?

    One of the downsides of him being a short, moaning-faced git with tattoos and pigeon shit hair is that if someone says "he's a woman beater" my instinctive reaction is "of course".

    I'm conscious that if the authorities took this approach, about 30% of the population of Brazil would be in jail, but it's good enough for me. 

×
×
  • Create New...