He allowed a substitute goalie to come on when one wasn't allowed and had to be told that law by the VAR. Then when the outfield player who went in net in saved the penalty and the players were all incorrectly celebrating at 5-5 he blew the final whistle (you can hear it just after 19:45) which set off another round of celebrations.Ref didn't do much wrong here from what I could see.
Actually a fair point and I take it back. I didn't notice him blow the whistle.He allowed a substitute goalie to come on when one wasn't allowed and had to be told that law by the VAR. Then when the outfield player who went in net in the end saved the penalty and the players were all incorrectly celebrating he blew the final whistle (19:45).
I actually disagree! Why should goalkeepers be allowed an advantage by coming off their line and narrowing the angle in a shootout! One of the few things I like VAR for!Ref didn't do much wrong here from what I could see. The rule though is terrible and probably the worst instance of VAR (I know we benefitted yesterday but still).
On the back of Bruno's, I had a debate yesterday about whether hesitation should be disallowed by the taker if the goalkeeper has to stay rooted to his line. We both said nay.
True, I think staying on the line should happen.I actually disagree! Why should goalkeepers be allowed an advantage by coming off their line and narrowing the angle in a shootout! One of the few things I like VAR for!
In my humble opinion, because they can't get across the whole goal without that momentum and movement, which they won't be fully aware of in terms of positioning. It asks a little much from keepers and nothing from the player.I actually disagree! Why should goalkeepers be allowed an advantage by coming off their line and narrowing the angle in a shootout! One of the few things I like VAR for!
They can, I was trained and used to play as a keeper.In my humble opinion, because they can't get across the whole goal without that momentum and movement, which they won't be fully aware of in terms of positioning. It asks a little much from keepers and nothing from the player.
You can see this in the penalty taken after the disallowed one where the goalkeeper still goes forward, which is the only way he managed to get across (only it wasn't really obvious so wasn't disallowed too).
In most circumstances, pens aren't awarded for obstructing what would other be obvious goals so I don't get the pedanticism about keepers. Just my opinion of course.
Then the takers shouldn't be allowed to stutter either. Allow both or neither.I actually disagree! Why should goalkeepers be allowed an advantage by coming off their line and narrowing the angle in a shootout! One of the few things I like VAR for!
And this. Just ridiculous.Didn't realise you can get booked for coming off your line?
You can see some goalkeepers altering their technique already.They can, I was training and used to play as a keeper.
The reason you step forward isn't for momentum, it's about angles. If you step forward you are not allowing the ball to get to its maximum speed or angle e.g. you are approaching the ball before the bend.
If it was for keeper momentum, then why jump forward, stop them push off one foot? Or why not instruct keepers to start in the back of the goal then jump forward to or on the goal line?
The new technique that will be implemented soon will be keepers traversing their goal line a lot more with added dummies.
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Yeah that's the other option, like the technique wide receivers in NFL had to develop when catching a ball in-play called "toe drag" or "toe drag swag":
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I still like him more than Mike Dean and Michael Oliver.He allowed a substitute goalie to come on when one wasn't allowed and had to be told that law by the VAR. Then when the outfield player who went in net in saved the penalty and the players were all incorrectly celebrating at 5-5 he blew the final whistle (you can hear it just after 19:45) which set off another round of celebrations.
Apparently part of the issue is that the MLS haven't adopted the new rules for 20/21 yet but are still on the 19/20 rules, presumably due to when the coronavirus disruption fell. If they were on the new rules then the goalkeeper wouldn't have been carrying a yellow card into the shootout and would have been initially warned about staying on his line rather than be booked.Jesus! Neither the refs nor the commentators had any idea about the rules!
And when the feck did having your feet in front of the line become a yellow card offence?
2:50 -The only thing worse than the officiating was the commentary. So clueless
If keepers were allowed off their line they could literally sprint towards the taker during the run up.
20 years from now, we'll have bionic eyes in the officials and I.T. programmes using virtual reality software on replays to measure millimetres.I have never seen anything like that in my life, extraordinary!
Just goes to show what VAR and rule changes has lead to football becoming, no doubt it has taken the spirit of the game away.
Fair point. I'll accept that.They can, I was trained and used to play as a keeper.
The reason you step forward isn't for momentum, it's about angles. If you step forward you are not allowing the ball to get to its maximum speed or angle e.g. you are approaching the ball before the bend.
If it was for keeper momentum, then why jump forward, stop then push off one foot? Or why not instruct keepers to start in the back of the goal then jump forward to or on the goal line?
The new technique that will be implemented soon will be keepers traversing their goal line a lot more with added dummies.
But that's the whole point of the stutter-style run up; to fool the goalkeeper.True, I think staying on the line should happen.
But then I also think the inconsistencies of run ups sometimes mean goalkeepers stutter expecting something to be hit that hasn't.
This law is no longer in play for most leagues but because the MLS started when the 19/20 laws were still in use, they end the season with those same laws. The actual law states that a keeper should be warned on the first offence of coming off the line and then cautioned for any subsequent breaches so I imagine at some point in the shoot out, he was warned about it.Jesus! Neither the refs nor the commentators had any idea about the rules!
And when the feck did having your feet in front of the line become a yellow card offence?
Judging by the level of referring in that video I doubt the ref knows he was meant to caution him firstThis law is no longer in play for most leagues but because the MLS started when the 19/20 laws were still in use, they end the season with those same laws. The actual law states that a keeper should be warned on the first offence of coming off the line and then cautioned for any subsequent breaches so I imagine at some point in the shoot out, he was warned about it.
The substitution and then the full time whistle that was blown with a penalty still to be taken was crazy and there's no excuse for that but I was just trying to give a bit of clarity on the bookingJudging by the level of referring in that video I doubt the ref knows he was meant to caution him first
He's actually done really well for Orlando, ironically scored a penalty during the actual match to make it 1-0.I wondered what Nani was up to these day's. This shootout let me know.
Just had a couple of watches of it again and it's tight but looks like he moves along the line rather than off it.Did anyone else think the replacement goalie came off his line for the goal he saved