Fortuna HSVed harder than HSV ever managed.Fortuna Düsseldorf and Bochum to penalties now after a pretty ridiculous comeback from Bochum starting tonight down 3-0.
I don’t know if Hamburg’s fail last season can be topped. I was speechless, and I was at Fenway and Toilet in 2004. It was like that crammed into a few minutes.Fortuna HSVed harder than HSV ever managed.
Do you mean the Hertha fail in 2022? Last year's was not particularly close at any point.I don’t know if Hamburg’s fail last season can be topped. I was speechless, and I was at Fenway and Toilet in 2004. It was like that crammed into a few minutes.
I of course realised you meant the last day of the regular season as soon as I logged off.Do you mean the Hertha fail in 2022? Last year's was not particularly close at any point.
Yeah that’s the one I was thinking of….from full-on pitch invasion to…”oh shit” in just a few minutes. Don’t think I’ll ever see that again.I of course realised you meant the last day of the regular season as soon as I logged off.
Literally the only comparison I can think of is the Jimmy Glass game.Yeah that’s the one I was thinking of….from full-on pitch invasion to…”oh shit” in just a few minutes. Don’t think I’ll ever see that again.
ESPN+ cut to that while we were celebrating Union’s UCL berth.
equivalent to Single A baseball no?"Professionally" might be doing some false work as a word for the German 6th division, but this rocks nonetheless.
The further you go down the pyramid, the tiers are no longer fully professionalized, you start getting semipro or even fully amateur teams.equivalent to Single A baseball no?
One of my good friends here is the coach of a 10th division team (though it was the team Antonio Rüdiger started at!). I'm pretty sure that 6th division, having watched a fair bit of 4th and 5th division football here, is semi-pro, at best. Not that it isn't impressive. But yeah, I'd be surprised if there is a 6th division player making more than €10,000 per year (as a wild-ass guess).The further you go down the pyramid, the tiers are no longer fully professionalized, you start getting semipro or even fully amateur teams.
Not sure about the German 6th division specifically, but I suspect it’s more a “we get the post-match beer money covered” level of payouts.
I still love to see it even if that is the case.
MLS didn't want to take a flier on him ehOne of my good friends here is the coach of a 10th division team (though it was the team Antonio Rüdiger started at!). I'm pretty sure that 6th division, having watched a fair bit of 4th and 5th division football here, is semi-pro, at best. Not that it isn't impressive. But yeah, I'd be surprised if there is a 6th division player making more than €10,000 per year (as a wild-ass guess).
haha give it some timeMLS didn't want to take a flier on him eh
I believe Dennis Schroder is making millions per year!One of my good friends here is the coach of a 10th division team (though it was the team Antonio Rüdiger started at!). I'm pretty sure that 6th division, having watched a fair bit of 4th and 5th division football here, is semi-pro, at best. Not that it isn't impressive. But yeah, I'd be surprised if there is a 6th division player making more than €10,000 per year (as a wild-ass guess).
I watched some random compilation of top 25 EPL goals last night. There were too many individual efforts, and not enough team goals highlighted. But the reason I mention this is because there was a lot of 'keeper getting caught out' goals (e.g., Billing vs. Burnley, Bruno Fernandes vs. Liverpool, etc.) and one thing that those goals offer (and really most of the goals on that list) is that there is no doubt those are good goals, and they just get celebrated by players and fans differently. I think it was on a Spurs podcast but the speaker said (paraphrasing) "VAR has diminished the greatest part of the game" and that's the truth. The standard for VAR review and reversal just needs to be raised significantly and I think that would resolve a lot of issues. We don't demand perfection, just some measures to correct CLEAR AND OBVIOUS mistakes.Welp, EPL clubs, save Wolves, have only themselves to blame next season.
View: https://twitter.com/footballontnt/status/1798696881104802275?s=46&t=GfuLFvTYcOxcFiCZjyIYZw
I totally agree that the game needs fewer penalties, especially for infractions that have really nothing to do with preventing a goal scoring opportunity. I'd even extend it to certain fouls in the box.I watched some random compilation of top 25 EPL goals last night. There were too many individual efforts, and not enough team goals highlighted. But the reason I mention this is because there was a lot of 'keeper getting caught out' goals (e.g., Billing vs. Burnley, Bruno Fernandes vs. Liverpool, etc.) and one thing that those goals offer (and really most of the goals on that list) is that there is no doubt those are good goals, and they just get celebrated by players and fans differently. I think it was on a Spurs podcast but the speaker said (paraphrasing) "VAR has diminished the greatest part of the game" and that's the truth. The standard for VAR review and reversal just needs to be raised significantly and I think that would resolve a lot of issues. We don't demand perfection, just some measures to correct CLEAR AND OBVIOUS mistakes.
One other thing that I think would help a ton, is making most unintentional handballs in the box indirect FKs. Way too many times soft penalties are given for those offenses. There needs to be some room to award a PK for unintentional handling (e.g., when stopping a shot with some likelihood of scoring, perhaps within the penalty box, but otherwise I think the game would be well served with fewer PKs awarded for unintentional handling.
Sid Lowe has argued for a while now that an unintended consequence of VAR is the number of penalty reviews. I agree wrt unintentional handballs in the box. He also mentions that players go down more easily in the box now, at the slightest contact, knowing full well that the contact will look worse in super slow motion and a penalty likely given.I watched some random compilation of top 25 EPL goals last night. There were too many individual efforts, and not enough team goals highlighted. But the reason I mention this is because there was a lot of 'keeper getting caught out' goals (e.g., Billing vs. Burnley, Bruno Fernandes vs. Liverpool, etc.) and one thing that those goals offer (and really most of the goals on that list) is that there is no doubt those are good goals, and they just get celebrated by players and fans differently. I think it was on a Spurs podcast but the speaker said (paraphrasing) "VAR has diminished the greatest part of the game" and that's the truth. The standard for VAR review and reversal just needs to be raised significantly and I think that would resolve a lot of issues. We don't demand perfection, just some measures to correct CLEAR AND OBVIOUS mistakes.
One other thing that I think would help a ton, is making most unintentional handballs in the box indirect FKs. Way too many times soft penalties are given for those offenses. There needs to be some room to award a PK for unintentional handling (e.g., when stopping a shot with some likelihood of scoring, perhaps within the penalty box, but otherwise I think the game would be well served with fewer PKs awarded for unintentional handling.
2 points re the bolded. First, having a 'booth review' with a cap of 30-45 seconds is badly needed. I get why the system was designed the way it was (watching Peacock's 'The Man in the Middle' was excellent), and there are still probably some instances where the ref on the field should get to take a look, but generally let the booth make the call for the sake of the game (N.B., not the sport necessarily).Sid Lowe has argued for a while now that an unintended consequence of VAR is the number of penalty reviews. I agree wrt unintentional handballs in the box. He also mentions that players go down more easily in the box now, at the slightest contact, knowing full well that the contact will look worse in super slow motion and a penalty likely given.
There no point now to lamenting about the lost awesomeness of the joy felt when a goal is scored. VAR is out of the bag. I’d be all for reviews having a time limit and being done at full speed. You don’t need slow motion to determine clear and obvious errors.
But LCFC just got backThe EPL is starting to look like La Liga
BREAKING: Six Premier League clubs face having to sell players before the end of June to comply with profit and sustainability rules
Sky Sports News understands Chelsea, Aston Villa, Newcastle, Everton, Nottingham Forest and Leicester City are the clubs under pressure
View: https://twitter.com/skysportsnews/status/1798679224175190334?s=46&t=XvGOrrWIyL-5CHVVL_0JYQ
I can’t speak for the Premier League, but in Spain La Liga rules apply to La Segunda too.But LCFC just got back
Premiership and EFL are separate entities with different rules.I can’t speak for the Premier League, but in Spain La Liga rules apply to La Segunda too.
Bring back Slab Head! Southgate out!In Euro warm up friendly news, Iceland beats England at Wembley, 1-0.
https://twitter.com/CBSSportsGolazo/status/1799182653805236733
I'd be fascinated to listen to that conversation. It really does look like Pep is trying to show Mazzula some strategy he has.
I dug up this Athletic piece from Feb about Joe growing up playing soccer and studying City for inspiration this season. Interesting stuff.I'd be fascinated to listen to that conversation. It really does look like Pep is trying to show Mazzula some strategy he has.
As if he pulled Kyle Walker, Silva or Grealish aside after they scored a goal and Pep wants to fix something. We need a video.I'd be fascinated to listen to that conversation. It really does look like Pep is trying to show Mazzula some strategy he has.
A change in the offside rule to the Wenger variation (attacker's whole body has to be past the defender's whole body to be in offside position) would also restore a bunch of "joy at unambiguously good goals". Because many of the marginal, "back of the shoe might or might not be level with the other guy" line-drawing fiascos that take 5 minutes and take away a goal where the attacker, in truth, really enjoyed no advantage from starting the play behind the defense, will suddenly not become violations (or reviews). Only plays where the guy really was not just slightly ahead of the defender but a full step past him will get ruled out.And more importantly, I disagree with the sentiment about undoing the damage of VAR. It will take a bit of time, but if VAR reviews occur significantly less often I think we will rediscover that joy and dopamine hit.
God, I can't wait. I think the real cutoff between the haves and have-nots in the PL is "is the club big enough to have a non-gambling sponsor." It seems shameful to have some crappy bet site as the sponsor.I thought the Premier League banned gambling companies from being shirt sponsors?
Ah, apparently it doesn't go into effect until after the 25/26 season. I think that was because that's how long someone's active deal lasted. Surprised they didn't ban new deals from being signed.
A rematch of the 1984 European Cup final, this is one of several premiere events being held during the ballpark's 100th anniversary celebration.
Tickets start at just $20 and go on sale to the general public today.
I was there. Peak Michael Bradley. The field was ridiculously short.Cleaning up real old e-mails, and found one for ticket sales for Liverpool-Roma from 2012. Their pitch?
Even now I laugh at that momentSuarez' "who me?" reaction at the red card should have garnered at least an academy award nomination.
Is there a double jeopardy rule here? What if they both managed to get a hand on it? Do they both go?Even now I laugh at that moment