I'm not one for conspiracy theories but...
Think it absolutely makes you wonder a bit more about some of the bizarre decisions that host countries have had the benefit of in previous World Cups. Those who think 2022 was rigged for Messi now have some more ammunition. This is the first time we've seen it being done so openly.
If the US get any beneficial decisions from here, people are going to cry foul...and you couldn't blame them.
This is genuinely an absolute head scratcher. Breathtaking really.
Re the 2022 World Cup, Argentina got some soft penalties but nothing out of the ordinary, certainly not enough to make me think it was rigged for Messi to win it. If Kolo Muani finishes that chance in extra time then Argentina most likely lose the match.
I don't for one second believe that 2022 was rigged. Not in a million years.Re the 2022 World Cup, Argentina got some soft penalties but nothing out of the ordinary, certainly not enough to make me think it was rigged for Messi to win it. If Kolo Muani finishes that chance in extra time then Argentina most likely lose the match.
Those have been reds all season unless your names Havertz and you play for Arsenal..Did we not all think that red card decision was wrong?
Is it not justice that it has been overturned?
I'm sure it's not the first red card to ever be over turned, although I can't think of a specific one.
A player missing a match because of a bad decision happens fairly regularly. What doesn't happen is the government of the country intervening to ensure he can play. It makes a mockery of the game and the tournament. It's an absolute joke of a decision and how anyone could possibly defend it, regardless of the actual decision during the match, is beyond me.
I hope he plays and Belgium fudging spank them.
yes it would be fair because that is football. Thousands of wrong decisions every year in all leagues, high and low that impact leagues and cup competitions. None of them are reviewed and suspended (note, the offence was accepted to have happened and if he does it again he will incur the penalty, not that the offence was overturned).
Balogun stepped on someone else's heel, foot up studs first. Ref looked at it on VAR and called it. That should have been the end of it.
So many players miss out over a wrong yellow card that leads to an accumulated suspension or a wrong call. Others get away with it. Just life. Why should one case get exceptional, and this is totally exceptional, treatment and every other case just be left on merit?? The joy of football is that it should be a level playing field at each level. This shows it isn't.
FIFA are wrong to get involved. USA and Pochettino should not select him but will.
I think it hasn’t been rescinded because FIFA doesn’t have a process for that at this tournament. I am unsure why. But they chose this article 27 thing because it gives them legal cover. Rescinding the card would have left them open.
Balogun did step on someone else’s heel. It’s really unfortunate and would have been painful for the Bosnia player. But surely serious foul play has to have a higher standard than this? It wasn’t just a lack of intent, it was an inability to put his foot on the floor, because the Bosnia guy and he got tangled. There’s nothing else he could have done. It’s unfortunate but I think it’s nonsense that this gets given as a red card.
I even thought Quansah’s was harsh. It was a wet pitch, and the ball basically propelled him further forward into the Mexican player. Also thought he got there easily first and the Mexico player sort of stuck his leg in. But, I get why, even though there was no intent from Quansah, he still could have done something else. Unfortunately his studs were up, and he chose to make that sort of tackle, and it ends up being a dangerous looking tackle. I get it.
But this idea of being able to slow down frame by frame to prove that a player’s studs were in the other guys ankle just needs to stop. I’d say that if England / Spurs were benefiting or whether we aren’t. It’s not even just about intent, and my point is the standard needs to be ‘could the player have reasonably done anything else’ and if so, I don’t think the punishment needs to be as hard as a red. So it will be rarer that it isn’t a red even under my bar, but I still think the application of the rules just needs to be better. VAR is getting involved in things it just shouldn’t be in, and bringing an impossible standard that players won’t be able to meet much of the time.
SheeeeeeshIt is mad that Trump getting involved has led the the common sense outcome. But I think that says just as much about VAR as it does about him.
Sheeeeeesh
A player's primary responsibility on the pitch is not to hurt another player. If you end up stamping on someone else's ankle you either did it on purpose, or you didn't purposefully avoid doing it, either way I think that should be a red card, being out of control is what is dangerous, intentional or not.
I think in both those examples the answer to your question is yes, the player could reasonably have done something else, not gone for the ball in that instance.
I think frame by frames are good, based on my criteria above, if your studs are on another players ankle for even a fraction of second you have been careless and shouldn't be on the pitch.
Both of those examples could easily have resulted in serious injury, thats why they need to be punished, as a deterrent for the future.
I dont think it needs to be expanded.Sorry, care to expand?
I dont think it needs to be expanded.
I totally agree with your general point, and that’s why I can see that Quansah’s is a red that wouldn’t be overturned.
What else could Balogun have done though? 1. This is a contact sport and they were fighting for the ball. 2. The Bosnia player comes into the back of him. The action basically takes about a second. Balogun was putting his foot down to stand. He surely has to be allowed to that?
Just watch it again in real time. With everything moving that quickly, and with the Bosnia player also moving (and so Balogun cannot predict exactly where his foot will be) what else is he supposed to do?
Balogun simply isn’t ’out of control’ in any sense of the word. He’s trying to get in front of the Bosnia player to hold up the ball. The Bosnia player is trying to get there first. They were both committed. It’s unfortunate and will have hurt. But that is literally football.
Quansah put himself in a position where the rain and the momentum allowed him to be ‘out of control’. Balogun just didn’t.
Look at the freeze frame of the Bosnian ankle, you have to give a red card for that, there is no excuse.
No way it was intentional, but you still have to punish it.
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