I'd love for the officials to actually utilise the players in order to make their decisions. Had the ref asked Ashley Young, "Do you think Gabby should be sent off for that tackle?" in this case I genuinely believe that he'd have said no. However had Ashley Young said yes, the refs response should be "Ok, Fine. However IF when I watch the replay back and I see that you've cheated me here, you will get double the ban Gabby does. Still happy with the sending off?"The same should go for penalty claims, dives etc etcThis sort of approach I believe, would help the game improve. The rules are clear, known and accepted by the players but the system at the moment rests all the responsibility on the officials to catch the players out at breaking the rules. If there was more retrospective punsihment used players would begin to think about their conduct a bit more during those 90 minutes.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/competitions/premier-league/11307931/Is-celebrating-an-away-goal-among-home-fans-ever-acceptable.htmlInteresting this, you'd argue two young kids probably shouldn't expect trouble, but is stupid to go in the home end, even if it is in the family stand.
Quote from: Smoke on December 22, 2014, 01:02:08 PMI'd love for the officials to actually utilise the players in order to make their decisions. Had the ref asked Ashley Young, "Do you think Gabby should be sent off for that tackle?" in this case I genuinely believe that he'd have said no. However had Ashley Young said yes, the refs response should be "Ok, Fine. However IF when I watch the replay back and I see that you've cheated me here, you will get double the ban Gabby does. Still happy with the sending off?"The same should go for penalty claims, dives etc etcThis sort of approach I believe, would help the game improve. The rules are clear, known and accepted by the players but the system at the moment rests all the responsibility on the officials to catch the players out at breaking the rules. If there was more retrospective punsihment used players would begin to think about their conduct a bit more during those 90 minutes. The first thing I can think of in response to this post is: if any or all of these suggestions were to be implemented then, we'd have a game that would last about five hours.
"I bought tickets in the Family Stand for a Christmas treat for the boys. Their mum is a Villa fan, I'm a United fan and they're inbetween the two."We didn't celebrate the Villa goal but when Falcao equalised the two boys jumped up in the air, super excited that Falcao had scored. I gave them a big hug.
Quote from: hipkiss92 on December 22, 2014, 05:05:34 PMhttp://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/competitions/premier-league/11307931/Is-celebrating-an-away-goal-among-home-fans-ever-acceptable.htmlInteresting this, you'd argue two young kids probably shouldn't expect trouble, but is stupid to go in the home end, even if it is in the family stand.I'm hoping my now nearly three year old lad might start getting interested in football in the coming years. If he was seven years old, and I had decided to go to Old Trafford to watch Villa v Man U, and Villa scored, and he cheered, I'd expect to be chucked out. Mainly, for irresponsibly taking my child to the 'wrong end'. I just wouldn't do it.