Christofaux
Full Member
And besides, if you are going to take somebody out, you ought to really take them out
I dunno, looked 50-50 and Keane was already committed.
And besides, if you are going to take somebody out, you ought to really take them out
His got both the ball, and his leg. Hardly leg breaking Pete.
I'm sure he loves his mum (so did the Krays by the way) but if he lacked aggression at Man Utd he's making up for it now. Ask Jeffers, Adebayor or Ramsey.
Studs up from behind, and the ball was out of play. He clearly wasn't in control of the tackle.
Of course the studs will be showing since he was coming in from the side. Adebayor was still playing on despite the ball being out, so your point is mute. I don't understand your point he was not in control of the tackle when he clearly got the ball.
Stop trying to over sanitize the game.
Im not over sanitising shit.
How you can justify that is a good tackle is beyond me. Its from behind and he takes the player.
You are allowed to tackle from the back if you get the ball, which he clearly succeeded in doing. I've never claimed it's a good tackle.
So if you only go by results rather than intent, that would mean that you would condemn a sober, sensible driver who happens to be momentarily distracted and drives into someone else far more than a drunk who is weaving all over the road but all other road users manage to avoid him?FIFA.com - FIFA to crack down on tackle from behind
By the result of the tackle i would say that it endangered the safety.
He's just not that kind of lad is he?What on earth has Shawcross' challenge on Adebayor got to do with what happened to Ramsey?
If you drive too fast in a built up area or without due care and attention and total someone no one claims it was intentional but it's still manslaughter.So if you only go by results rather than intent, that would mean that you would condemn a sober, sensible driver who happens to be momentarily distracted and drives into someone else far more than a drunk who is weaving all over the road but all other road users manage to avoid him?
Strange, because most other people would condemn the drunk driver.
He's just not that kind of lad is he?
So if you only go by results rather than intent, that would mean that you would condemn a sober, sensible driver who happens to be momentarily distracted and drives into someone else far more than a drunk who is weaving all over the road but all other road users manage to avoid him?
Strange, because most other people would condemn the drunk driver.
The driver who loses control of his car at 50mph in a 30mph zone and as a result injures a pedestrian cannot successfully defend himself by saying “I didn’t mean it – I am not that kind of person.” And nor should it be allowed to be said, in some kind of defence, as it has been before, “he was just too slow –Arsenal move the ball so quickly.” Enough is enough. When you see an injury such as Ramsay’s the old line “I got there as quick as I could, ref” just ain’t funny any more.
What on earth has Shawcross' challenge on Adebayor got to do with what happened to Ramsey?
Because he made one poorly-judged (at worst) challenge in the past does this mean he set out to injure Ramsey?
On that basis Gallas is a reknowned hatchet man and thug - who will always be presumed guilty until proved innocent - on the basis of his over the top of the ball challenge against Bolton (when in reality he's just a bit of a fanny who is about as far removed from the hard man sterotype as it's possible to be)
The kind who hasn't broken anybody's leg in 10 years in the PL.I refer you to my comment about Gallas.
What "kind of lad" is he?
If you drive too fast in a built up area or without due care and attention and total someone no one claims it was intentional but it's still manslaughter.
The kind who hasn't broken anybody's leg in 10 years in the PL.
The kind who hasn't broken anybody's leg in 10 years in the PL.
I actually saw an article which had an example similar to this ill try find it.
It Wasn’t Only Ryan Shawcross Who Put Arsenal Star Aaron Ramsey In Hospital | CaughtOffside.com
Irrelevant because I never said too fast, built up area, due care and attention. I said a sensible, sober driver who was momentarily distracted - maybe a wasp suddenly came in through his open window for example.
I was comparing an unfortunate incident, certainly not premeditated (sober driver who caused an accident, or Shawcross) to something preventable and dangerous that by pure luck didn't cause a major accident (the drunk driver who everyone else avoided, or one of Gallas's victims whose legs were not broken by sheer chance).
So basically that article wants to cut out nearly all accidental fouls from the game. Because if we're going to start saying that you'll get severe punishment when you make an honest, genuine attempt to play the ball, and are slightly late, then it's a shambles. It's asking for a faultless, 100% correct judgement from every player, every time they make a tackle. Tackling used to be viewed as a skill, when done correctly. If you make people afraid to tackle, you lose an awful lot from the game.
The sad thing is, these people will probably get their way soon enough, and we'll all be sat around not watching 22 blokes running around, and getting 'technical fouls' when someone nudges into them.
I can't wait.
I would consider shawcross more to be someone who sped to avoid a red light, but was too slow and caused an accident.... but he didn't mean to cause the accident...
I thought you lot were saying he was too slow which caused the accident. So he's too fast and too slow. I wish you'd agree a common "reason" for the condemnation as your arguments may look a bit more consistent.
However, considering Gallas has gone into 1000s of tackles too high and too slow (or too fast??? - you choose) please let us hear your thoughts on him. Surely you must think he is totally despicable if you think Shawcross is so bad for getting one wrong.
I found the majority of the article a bit cringing i agree, but the part i quoted is correct.
The bit about the driving offence is, the bit about not being able to explain the foul by saying the player got it before you isn't, IMO.
How can we start suggesting that a player who goes in for a 50-50 ball, and gets beaten to it as Shawcross was, is guilty on the same level as the bloke who goes in studs up, mid-leg height? The problem is, when the player goes to make the tackle, he believes he will get it. You only need to look at Shawcross and way he swept his leg to try clear the ball to see that.
If the rules put him in a postion where he doesn't feel he can go for a ball that he believes he can win-and which should be a fair contest between two players-for fear of the other player being a split-second quicker to it than he genuinely believed, then we are on the road to punishing anoyone who leaves their feet to make a tackle. 50-50 challenges will be a thing of the past. I don't want that, personally.
I would consider shawcross more to be someone who sped to avoid a red light, but was too slow and caused an accident.... but he didn't mean to cause the accident...
The fact you call Gallas wreckless is laughable. Davies lunged in and fairly won the ball but at the cost of receiving a boot meant for the ball in his ankle... if anything he was driving the same way Shawcross was.
The kind who hasn't broken anybody's leg in 10 years in the PL.
If Shawcross didn't get the ball then he is at fault. Good defenders know when they will get the ball.
If Shawcross didn't get the ball then he is at fault. Good defenders know when they will get the ball.
1000s of tackles.. what the feck are you on about man.
If you could actually read you would see that my metaphor he tried to skip the red light by speeding, or tried to get to the ball without thinking of ramifications, missed the light, or missed the ball, and had an accident which he is at fault for even if he didn't mean for it to happen, or broke a kids leg.
This thread is getting more and more surreal.
Are you really going down the road of demonising every tackle in which someone tries but fails to make contact with the ball?
If you could read, even what you've written yourself, you would realise how confused your posts are - first he's too slow, then he's too fast. First it's the player coming in second who's wrong, then it's the player coming in first. An unintentional accident is wicked, but one way over the top (e.g. Gallas) is fine and acceptable.
man just shut up and move on.
Perhaps comprehension isn't your thing?