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SEMerc
12 December 2011 21:20:25

I know it may be the TV, but has David Platt's head grown to twice the size it was in his playing career?

SEMerc
12 December 2011 21:22:09

Mata oozes class. He is the one (and only) Chavs player I'd love to see in a Spurs shirt.


Mancini now clearly playing for a draw, especially given Clichy has gone.

SEMerc
12 December 2011 21:29:55



Shiteh 1-0 up. Playing well. Christ even Barry looks a half decent player this evening.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


Great pass from Terry, good play by Sturridge, Lampard-like run into the box and finish from Meireles.


1-1


Now Chelsea has given up playing that suicidal high back line the defence looks quite solid.


 


Talking of poor refereeing, how come Toure is still on the pitch after kicking out at someone lying on the ground?


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


Indeed, the game has been much more even since AVB put his todger back in his trousers. You can only play high against the likes of Shiteh if you have a midfield destroyer type player.

Saint Snow
12 December 2011 21:45:39


has David Platt's head grown to twice the size it was in his playing career?


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


Yes.



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
DTHFCJ
12 December 2011 22:02:57


I know it may be the TV, but has David Platt's head grown to twice the size it was in his playing career?


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


Thats Sky HD for you,that said hes always been a big headed bar steward,ive a feeling who ever gets city next are gooner get hammered

Snow Hoper
12 December 2011 22:04:59


Going to war over religion is like killing each other to see who has the better imaginary friend.


Home : Thorndon, Suffolk.
Snow Hoper
12 December 2011 22:06:02

ps Don't tell anyone, but I forgot about the game and didn't turn it on until the start of the 2nd half


Going to war over religion is like killing each other to see who has the better imaginary friend.


Home : Thorndon, Suffolk.
SEMerc
12 December 2011 22:15:02


ps Don't tell anyone, but I forgot about the game and didn't turn it on until the start of the 2nd half


Originally Posted by: Snow Hoper 


Oh, you missed that great decision, from your point of view, by Clattenburg.


Mr Clattenburg, as they say, has a bit of history.


If Dogleash has any sense he won't play Bellamy in any match where Clattenburg has been named as referee.


 


 


From Wiki.


''Perhaps Clattenburg's fiercest criticism in top-flight refereeing followed his officiating of the Merseyside derby between Everton and Liverpool on 20 October 2007.[21] The first notable incident involving Clattenburg was the award of a penalty kick for an apparent professional foul by Everton's Tony Hibbert on Liverpool's Steven Gerrard. Clattenburg initially appeared to take out his yellow card to book Hibbert but after an interaction, albeit brief, with Gerrard, Clattenburg changed his mind and issued Hibbert a red card.[22] He later elected not to send off Dirk Kuyt for a waist-high lunge at Phil Neville.[23] One final controversy arose when he declined Everton's appeals for a penalty in the third minute of injury time, with the score at 1–2, when Jamie Carragher appeared to foul Joleon Lescott in the Liverpool penalty area.[24][25] Clattenburg has never since been appointed to referee an Everton match.


In December 2009, Clattenburg took charge of a tie between Bolton Wanderers and Manchester City. City personnel alleged that at half-time, Clattenburg asked members of their bench: "How do you work with Craig Bellamy all week?" In the second half that followed, he booked Bellamy twice, once for dissent and then for diving, although replays suggested he was actually fouled. City manager Mark Hughes later said: "I've seen Mark Clattenburg have a lot better games than he's had [here today]"[26] and described his decision to send off Bellamy as "laughable".[27]


Clattenburg has also encountered contempt when officiating two fixtures between Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United. In 2005 when Tottenham's Pedro Mendes had a long-range shot fumbled over the line by United goalkeeper Roy Carroll, neither Clattenburg or his assistants were in a position to award the goal. Five years later, in October 2010, he allowed to stand a United goal scored under controversial circumstances (although strictly correct under game laws) when Nani tapped the ball into the net while Spurs keeper Heurelho Gomes believed his team had a free-kick.[28]


Still...... Warnock likes him


''Clattenburg has, however, been the recipient of good feedback from some figures in his recent career. After an incident-filled game between Queens Park Rangers and Nottingham Forest in February 2011, QPR manager Neil Warnock described the official's handling of the match as "absolutely fantastic". Clattenburg issued an early red card to Forest's Radosław Majewski for a two-footed lunge on Adel Taarabt, and he also dismissed QPR appeals for a penalty when Wayne Routledge went tumbling in the box late on. Despite that, and a total of 27 fouls during the game, Warnock praised Clattenburg for being "so in control."[29][30]


 


 

DTHFCJ
12 December 2011 22:24:13


ps Don't tell anyone, but I forgot about the game and didn't turn it on until the start of the 2nd half


Originally Posted by: Snow Hoper 


 id say your secrets pretty safe

DTHFCJ
12 December 2011 22:29:57



ps Don't tell anyone, but I forgot about the game and didn't turn it on until the start of the 2nd half


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


Oh, you missed that great decision, from your point of view, by Clattenburg.


Mr Clattenburg, as they say, has a bit of history.


From Wiki.


''Perhaps Clattenburg's fiercest criticism in top-flight refereeing followed his officiating of the Merseyside derby between Everton and Liverpool on 20 October 2007.[21] The first notable incident involving Clattenburg was the award of a penalty kick for an apparent professional foul by Everton's Tony Hibbert on Liverpool's Steven Gerrard. Clattenburg initially appeared to take out his yellow card to book Hibbert but after an interaction, albeit brief, with Gerrard, Clattenburg changed his mind and issued Hibbert a red card.[22] He later elected not to send off Dirk Kuyt for a waist-high lunge at Phil Neville.[23] One final controversy arose when he declined Everton's appeals for a penalty in the third minute of injury time, with the score at 1–2, when Jamie Carragher appeared to foul Joleon Lescott in the Liverpool penalty area.[24][25] Clattenburg has never since been appointed to referee an Everton match.


In December 2009, Clattenburg took charge of a tie between Bolton Wanderers and Manchester City. City personnel alleged that at half-time, Clattenburg asked members of their bench: "How do you work with Craig Bellamy all week?" In the second half that followed, he booked Bellamy twice, once for dissent and then for diving, although replays suggested he was actually fouled. City manager Mark Hughes later said: "I've seen Mark Clattenburg have a lot better games than he's had [here today]"[26] and described his decision to send off Bellamy as "laughable".[27]


Clattenburg has also encountered contempt when officiating two fixtures between Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester United. In 2005 when Tottenham's Pedro Mendes had a long-range shot fumbled over the line by United goalkeeper Roy Carroll, neither Clattenburg or his assistants were in a position to award the goal. Five years later, in October 2010, he allowed to stand a United goal scored under controversial circumstances (although strictly correct under game laws) when Nani tapped the ball into the net while Spurs keeper Heurelho Gomes believed his team had a free-kick.[28]


Still...... Warnock likes him


''Clattenburg has, however, been the recipient of good feedback from some figures in his recent career. After an incident-filled game between Queens Park Rangers and Nottingham Forest in February 2011, QPR manager Neil Warnock described the official's handling of the match as "absolutely fantastic". Clattenburg issued an early red card to Forest's Radosław Majewski for a two-footed lunge on Adel Taarabt, and he also dismissed QPR appeals for a penalty when Wayne Routledge went tumbling in the box late on. Despite that, and a total of 27 fouls during the game, Warnock praised Clattenburg for being "so in control."[29][30]


 


 


Originally Posted by: Snow Hoper 


i remember putting my fist through my living room door when Mendes scored that goal and the officials decided the ball has to be at least 4ft over the line to be considered a goal

Gooner
13 December 2011 00:59:13







Tottenham paid the price for not turning up in the first half, finding themselves 2 down, then coming out in the 2nd half and playing against 13 men.


Shocking from the officials ...............still undecided about the pen that was given ..............just my opinion.


 


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


The penalty given was soft. I'm more concerned about the two that weren't given and the goal that was ruled offside when it clearly wasn't. The actual score should have been 4-2 to Spurs.


Originally Posted by: Gooner 


It was soft but as far as what should have been it happens to most clubs, look at the Bolton sending off at Spurs last week, horrendous decision. It is swings and roundabouts and all clubs suffer and benefit from poor decisions i'm afraid.


Chelsea should have also been a man down in 15 minutes at Newcastle last week, that would have changed the game especially at 0-0 , it happens every week up and down the country .......sadly


Originally Posted by: Karl Guille 


Quality comment Gooner, can't argue with that!


Originally Posted by: Gooner 


Its true though Karl, I would be gutted if that had happened to Arsenal today, livid infact, Officials have to be accountable.


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


That's extremely harsh.


I do a lot of cricket umpiring and one of my responses to a player who says I made a mistake is to point out gently and politely that I make far fewer than the players....


The referee is only human, as are the two assistants.  They will never see everything and they will never see everything absolutely correctly.  You have to accept that as a fact. If you want the match officiated like American Football with half a dozen referees on the pitch to watch eveything that happens, with on-field discussions every time there is an incident then you'll have a very well officiated match taking about four hours and boring the pants off everyone watching....


Originally Posted by: Gooner 


Really???? And may I ask how much you get paid for umpiring????


The top refs love playing up to the camera and being the big I am ..................trust me I have heard it first hand from a former prem ref. They get paid very well, why shouldn't they be accountable??


Ask the England 1986 squad what they think?? I could list a 1000 more incidents as well. as I am sure you could.


There is far too much money involved nowadays, Foy,Choy or Hoy whatever his name is had a mare and so did his assitants. I can understand a marginal decision but the goal that was ruled offside could be seen without a replay.


It is about time the 4th official came into play.


All IMO of course


Remember anything after T120 is really Just For Fun



Marcus
Banbury
North Oxfordshire
378 feet A S L


CAPE-steve
13 December 2011 09:42:36
Frank Lampard still complaining about not getting enough time on the pitch. Anyone would think he's bigger than the club.
SEMerc
13 December 2011 10:04:51

Frank Lampard still complaining about not getting enough time on the pitch. Anyone would think he's bigger than the club.

Originally Posted by: CAPE-steve 


Well the one good thing is he said last night he would hang around for the remainder of his contract (18 months). Which means self evidently, he isn't going anywhere else

SEMerc
13 December 2011 12:03:57

Oh good God, just found out that Foy is the 4th official for the Chavs game at WHL and Webb will be the ref. I cannot think of a worse nightmare.

Snow Hoper
13 December 2011 13:57:50

I sometimes wonder whether ex pro's would make better ref's having played the game


Going to war over religion is like killing each other to see who has the better imaginary friend.


Home : Thorndon, Suffolk.
Saint Snow
13 December 2011 14:37:30


I sometimes wonder whether ex pro's would make better ref's having played the game


Originally Posted by: Snow Hoper 


Well it's one of the few post-football career jobs that Gazza hasn't tried yet. Not sure he'd be a natural..



Martin
Home: St Helens (26m asl) Work: Manchester (75m asl)
A TWO addict since 14/12/01
"How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political freedom to keep wealth in power? Here lies the whole art of Conservative politics."
Aneurin Bevan
Gandalf The White
13 December 2011 15:28:22


I sometimes wonder whether ex pro's would make better ref's having played the game


Originally Posted by: Snow Hoper 


Well, if you think of the cricket parallels, most of the umpires on the first class panel are former county or test players.


It does at least mean that (a) you understand the game better, (b) you understand how the players are thinking and (c) you're more likely to get respect from the players (all things being equal)


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


David M Porter
13 December 2011 21:19:42

Too much money in football is the problem IMO. It's time football was allowed to be a game again instead of a multi-billion pound business. All that big money has done to the game in my view is put match officials under huge pressure to get every decision they make correct, has put managers under incredible pressure to win every game and stay high up the league table or they're out the door, and totally ruin the quality of the game in the process.


At the age of 32, I'm just glad that I can just about remember back to when football was still the people's game, because I think it ceased to be that when big money came into it.


Lenzie, Glasgow

"Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom, and we must always be ready to listen and respect other points of view."- Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
SEMerc
14 December 2011 02:41:21

Meanwhile, guess which club has benefitted the most from dodgy refereeing decisions.


Well according to this at least.


http://www.debatabledecisions.com/tables

wallaw
14 December 2011 08:34:53

Look who would have been the highest climbers as a result of better refereeing? I'm happy Martin O'Neil is here but I do have huge sympathy with Bruce


Ian


Stockton-on-Tees

Gandalf The White
14 December 2011 10:56:13


Meanwhile, guess which club has benefitted the most from dodgy refereeing decisions.


Well according to this at least.


http://www.debatabledecisions.com/tables


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


LOL.  Does that mean no more bitching about referees?


As you might expect the analysis is a bit simplistic, given the example they provide.  It ignores the fact that a team will play differently if it is losing or winning.  If a goal is disallowed for offside that team will still be trying for the equaliser or win, if the goal is allowed then they will most likely play different tactics from that point.


Still, it's an interesting piece of analysis.


Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


SEMerc
14 December 2011 11:20:02



Meanwhile, guess which club has benefitted the most from dodgy refereeing decisions.


Well according to this at least.


http://www.debatabledecisions.com/tables


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


LOL.  Does that mean no more bitching about referees?


As you might expect the analysis is a bit simplistic, given the example they provide.  It ignores the fact that a team will play differently if it is losing or winning.  If a goal is disallowed for offside that team will still be trying for the equaliser or win, if the goal is allowed then they will most likely play different tactics from that point.


Still, it's an interesting piece of analysis.


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


The table that has the most value clearly is the Decisions one, given as you say, it is impossible to pick outcomes.


Next time Tony Pulis whinges about how hard done by Stoke have been this season he can STFU.

Gandalf The White
14 December 2011 16:11:23




Meanwhile, guess which club has benefitted the most from dodgy refereeing decisions.


Well according to this at least.


http://www.debatabledecisions.com/tables


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


LOL.  Does that mean no more bitching about referees?


As you might expect the analysis is a bit simplistic, given the example they provide.  It ignores the fact that a team will play differently if it is losing or winning.  If a goal is disallowed for offside that team will still be trying for the equaliser or win, if the goal is allowed then they will most likely play different tactics from that point.


Still, it's an interesting piece of analysis.


Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White 


The table that has the most value clearly is the Decisions one, given as you say, it is impossible to pick outcomes.


Next time Tony Pulis whinges about how hard done by Stoke have been this season he can STFU.


Originally Posted by: SEMerc 


Stoke Town Football United?



Location: South Cambridgeshire
130 metres ASL
52.0N 0.1E


haghir22
16 December 2011 18:59:46

So the FA, after two months of nothing, run a three day investigation into the Suarez racism claims and then still postpone a result until next Tuesday.


I presume so his ban coincides with him being out for the Utd game.....ahem...


 


 


YNWA
NUT
17 December 2011 11:57:00

19,995 goals have been scored since the Premier League started in 1992...........good chance we getting goal 20,000 today

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