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toanoradian posted:
Not technically a foul but Frank Rijkaard spitting at Rudi Völler's mullet after being sent off is probably up there.
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# ? Jun 11, 2024 06:18 |
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This one comes to mindWikipedia posted:Andoni Goikoetxea Olaskoaga (born 23 May 1956), Goiko for short, is a Spanish retired footballer, and the current manager of Equatorial Guinea. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CaEbB78GLyA
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Earthy Ape Unit posted:C) This isn't perfect (lmao portugal), and it's Europe focused, but here. http://www.uefa.com/memberassociations/uefarankings/country/ That's the rankings UEFA uses to determine how many teams get to go from each league to the champions/europa leage tourney spots. MLS is probably 7-11 or so, but I think a team like FC Sounders Seattle in their current state could probably hang around in the middle of 4-6. Yeah I went there Gigi Galli. lol yeah MLS is on the same level as the Eredivisie and Seattle Sounders would be midtable in Serie A. Good one.
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toanoradian posted:
In 1982, Germany's Harald Schumacher knocked out France's Patrick Battiston inconscious, cracking his ribs and knocking out some teeth, he didn't get sent off. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VPTOnClKCJc http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Germany_vs_France_(1982) Edit: oh, already posted. Kurtofan fucked around with this message at 10:24 on Jul 4, 2014 |
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stickyfngrdboy posted:The ball has to be the right size, they are rigorously tested for all kinds of things. you can find them here Were the players much more obedient and polite then? If a foul like that happened today, half the team would go after the keeper and the other half would get into the ref's face.
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Doctor Malaver posted:Were the players much more obedient and polite then? If a foul like that happened today, half the team would go after the keeper and the other half would get into the ref's face. I think they were mostly panicked he was going to die, I doubt gamesmanship was on their minds.
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But drat, look at that scoreline. ![]() ![]()
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Not one single foul but I saw a doc on the 1962 World Cup the other day and when it comes to fouls Italy-Chile from that tournament is up there, it isn't called the Battle of Santiago for nothing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5jVMSlpZhg (also one of the best introductions to a match I've ever seen) and then there's that games spiritual successor Portugal-Netherlands from 2006: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9wALiyDM_Nk
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Doctor Malaver posted:Were the players much more obedient and polite then? If a foul like that happened today, half the team would go after the keeper and the other half would get into the ref's face. That was from a time in football which, while much cleaner than the two decades prior to 82, involved players kicking lumps out of each other reasonably regularly. You had to punch or elbow someone to get sent off, usually. So if a player went into an unfair challenge and hurt one of their team, nobody surrounded him or the ref, they just waited til the next time that player had the ball and kicked him up in the air. edit: lol see that video posted above for evidence of this exact thing stickyfngrdboy fucked around with this message at 13:53 on Jul 4, 2014 |
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vyelkin posted:lol yeah MLS is on the same level as the Eredivisie and Seattle Sounders would be midtable in Serie A. Good one. Jozy loving Altidore scored 39 in 67 in the dutch league. It's all kids and wastemen. And the top Italian sides would destroy the sounders but they could handle the dregs of Serie B temporarily up. MLS is bad but so is a lot of lower level European soccer. The talent curve goes exponential IMHO.
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the championship would merk all of the MLS teams
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Total Meatlove posted:Each tournament gets a new ball; This picture is amazing. drat, we must have had an Azeteca in the family for a serious amount of years.
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Kurtofan posted:In 1982, Germany's Harald Schumacher knocked out France's Patrick Battiston inconscious, cracking his ribs and knocking out some teeth, he didn't get sent off. I remember someone doing a poll of people that the French public historically hate a few years back, Schumacher was first above Hitler. So I'm pretty sure it's fair to say that that is indeed the most despised foul of all time. It's deliberate, malicious, and seriously bloody dangerous.
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Edit : Wrong Thread
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Another very violent match was Brazil vs. Hungary in 1954, also named Battle of Berne and notorious because both teams were very attack-minded and everyone expected a beautiful game; Wikipedia has a nice article on it. Both squads kept fighting on the dressing rooms after the game ended.
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Are there any good soccer documentaries out there? The only one I really watched was The Two Escobars and I thought it was fantastic.
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StrungOutFlip posted:Are there any good soccer documentaries out there? The only one I really watched was The Two Escobars and I thought it was fantastic. Stolen from the football photos/videos thread, a bunch of skysports documentaries about some of the best players ever that are always interesting Karl Sharks posted:For those of you going through a bit of footy withdrawal and want to keep up your streak of getting little work done, here are a list of list of some half hour documentaries Sky has done about The World's Greatest Footballers (and Iniesta I guess idk):
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quote:As the global sporting world faces one corruption scandal after another, former Manchester United star Eric Cantona presents the stories of five football heroes whose social conscience led them to challenge unjust regimes, join opposition movements and lead the fight for democracy and human rights. Football Rebels looks at a side of football that does not always make the headlines. http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/footballrebels/
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Netflix has all of the ESPN 30 for 30 docs on soccer available.
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these look amazing. is there a way to watch them on-demand I'm not seeing or do I just have to wait for them to come up on the live stream?
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StrungOutFlip posted:Are there any good soccer documentaries out there? The only one I really watched was The Two Escobars and I thought it was fantastic. There's a decent documentary on QPR's new owners called The Four Year Plan which should be available from your favourite questionably reputable internet site. There's also Kill the Referee available here in terrible quality which follows referees at the 2008 Euros.
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EvilHawk posted:There's a decent documentary on QPR's new owners called The Four Year Plan which should be available from your favourite questionably reputable internet site. Four year plan is utterly incredible and I'm so glad the owners didn't realise how hilariously bad they came across, else presumably they wouldnt have given permission.
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My favourite football film is a 21st Century Portrait. Here's a taste of it here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJNPDlzF4Wg I like how it's 99% extreme concentration with 1% of it being bursts of energy and skill.
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Spangly A posted:Four year plan is utterly incredible and I'm so glad the owners didn't realise how hilariously bad they came across, else presumably they wouldnt have given permission. Echoing this, the owner orders his henchman onto the pitch to force the manager to make subs, fires loads of managers, demands an angry fan apologize to him, and wears fancy rich person casual clothes. I don't know anything about QPR, but it was gripping.
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EvilHawk posted:There's a decent documentary on QPR's new owners called The Four Year Plan which should be available from your favourite questionably reputable internet site. Four Year Plan's available on Netflix in the US, highly recommend it as well. They also just put up another half-hour of deleted scenes which are just as mad as anything that made it into the film.
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Badger of Basra posted:these look amazing. is there a way to watch them on-demand I'm not seeing or do I just have to wait for them to come up on the live stream?
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If you have players from Argentina and Belgium with a ref from Italy what language are they speaking when the ref talks to the players?
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Lee Tunnell posted:If you have players from Argentina and Belgium with a ref from Italy what language are they speaking when the ref talks to the players? Gesticulation Probably a combination of English and Spanish, some of the Spanish speakers will understand Italian as well
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whoever said that the intercontinental cup was not highly regarded is a loving idiot
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I think it's usually english. Rizzoli is a CL ref, he probably speaks a few languages already.
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Weaponized Cum posted:whoever said that the intercontinental cup was not highly regarded is a loving idiot it isn't highly regarded though
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FIFA referees are required to pass a basic competency test in English, so that's a common one, but I wouldn't be surprised if Rizzoli knew a few other languages
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I should know this, but is a team allowed to bring in another player (not likely) mid cup if someone who hasn't played gets hurt in camp mid-Cup?
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Dirk Pitt posted:I should know this, but is a team allowed to bring in another player (not likely) mid cup if someone who hasn't played gets hurt in camp mid-Cup? Nope, the last opportunity to replace an injured player is 24 hours before the respective team's first match.
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Dirk Pitt posted:I should know this, but is a team allowed to bring in another player (not likely) mid cup if someone who hasn't played gets hurt in camp mid-Cup? The tournament squad is 23 players (20 outfield plus 3 goalkeepers), so there should be enough depth. I could foresee FIFA making an exception in the very unlikely case of all three goalkeepers getting injured, however. North Korea tried to bring an extra outfield player in 2010 by registering him as their third goalkeeper. FIFA told them if he played it had to be in goal.
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Now that my team is out, I am cheering for whichever team is behind to score so that there will a tie with exciting tiebreakers. I see no fault in this system. Can somebody explain to me in what circumstances it is okay to grab another player from behind? I would have thought that was always a foul, but apparently not. Also, it would be lovely if there were a way for refs to penalize blatant drama-dives.
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Arsenic Lupin posted:Also, it would be lovely if there were a way for refs to penalize blatant drama-dives. There already is, simulation is a yellow card offence and sometimes players are stupid enough to get sent off for it. Referees don't ever enforce this because sending players off ~*damages brands*~
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Whose brand? The team's, football's, or the individual player's?
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Arsenic Lupin posted:Can somebody explain to me in what circumstances it is okay to grab another player from behind? I would have thought that was always a foul, but apparently not. This is always a foul. Take note that the referee often doesn't call a foul when both players are grabbing each other at the same time in a similar manner/with similar force, but what you said sounds nothing like this, so most likely he hosed up (or applied the advantage rule).
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# ? Jun 11, 2024 06:18 |
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Also ask yourself if the grab had any effect on how things were playing out. If it didn't really interfere with play it was probably trifling and so ignored. If it did effect play then yeah, probably a miss like Vis said.
chaoslord fucked around with this message at 20:42 on Jul 5, 2014 |
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