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I truly do not believe that striking is the way to go.If there's evidence to support the referee's decision was wrong re Bellingham then I have no problem with that, but I have a problem with the 6 match ban and I hope even more that they go on strike after that.
Care to explain why?I truly do not believe that striking is the way to go.
3 main reasons:Care to explain why?
I don't think going on strike necessarily refers to just this incident. Things have been bubbling away in Spain for a while now. Especially with Real Madrid.3 main reasons:
1) It was determined from the Referee’s report that it was a case of "… minor violence against the referees", whereby the Referee stated in his report that Rudiger was dismissed for "throwing an object from the technical area, which missed me". It could be argued that it was a technical assault rather than an assault, whereby although both are extremely bad, the fact that no official was hurt etc has to be treated as ‘mitigation’. I think the main issue is when the 6 match suspension will be served & how much football he actually misses.
2) Referees are there do their job on the day and let others deal with the length of time of formal misconduct action.
3) Strike action should only be taken as a very last resort & I don’t think that needs to come into play in respect of this particular incident. Had any of the officials been hurt, then different kettle of fish.
And that would be fair enough.I don't think going on strike necessarily refers to just this incident. Things have been bubbling away in Spain for a while now. Especially with Real Madrid.
I agree with the principle and as Runner Ref has said, the thread I was replying to probably had more to it with it being Real Madrid than just the incident involving the 6 match ban. I don’t think a 6 match ban is overly lenient for this particular incident in professional football because the object missed. However, had the Referee been hit/hurt then I would have expected to see a ban at least double as a minimum.I can accept the reasons listed against strike action but alternatively the longer behaviour like this is leniently punished then the sooner it will be that a referee is killed on a football pitch! If this behaviour isn’t stamped on harshly at the top then it feeds down into grassroots. I think it’s about time professional officials did take a stand as that would open doors for officials at the lower ends to follow suit.
I don't disagree with any of that David. As I've said on here before, I work with athletes so am quite the opposite of anti-athlete, understand the frustrations and that regrettable behaviour will happen and fully support an appeal system and any outcomes.3 main reasons:
1) It was determined from the Referee’s report that it was a case of "… minor violence against the referees", whereby the Referee stated in his report that Rudiger was dismissed for "throwing an object from the technical area, which missed me". It could be argued that it was a technical assault rather than an assault, whereby although both are extremely bad, the fact that no official was hurt etc has to be treated as ‘mitigation’. I think the main issue is when the 6 match suspension will be served & how much football he actually misses.
2) Referees are there do their job on the day and let others deal with the length of time of formal misconduct action.
3) Strike action should only be taken as a very last resort & I don’t think that needs to come into play in respect of this particular incident. Had any of the officials been hurt, then different kettle of fish.
That’s true with your final para.I don't disagree with any of that David. As I've said on here before, I work with athletes so am quite the opposite of anti-athlete, understand the frustrations and that regrettable behaviour will happen and fully support an appeal system and any outcomes.
My comment re striking was more as a culmination of events in Spain, which have been going on unabated for a long time largely in relation to Real, as oppposed to the six match ban alone (which, to me, is fine for what he did). It is so pervasive and the Spanish FA seem spineless and incapable of dealing or unwilling to deal with it.
There’s also regional politics at player as a friend from Spain put it when he refereed there it was a open secret that there were serious issues with Spanish FA , Referees themselves and regional politics even acknowledged by the Spanish FA but it’s very hard and complex to deal with and a strike could make that worse and may be seen as political if certain regions referees had certian fixtures that week.I don't disagree with any of that David. As I've said on here before, I work with athletes so am quite the opposite of anti-athlete, understand the frustrations and that regrettable behaviour will happen and fully support an appeal system and any outcomes.
My comment re striking was more as a culmination of events in Spain, which have been going on unabated for a long time largely in relation to Real, as oppposed to the six match ban alone (which, to me, is fine for what he did). It is so pervasive and the Spanish FA seem spineless and incapable of dealing or unwilling to deal with it.
Why should his punishment be less because he wasn’t accurate? He’s attempted to throw something at an official, whether he hits him or misses him should be irrelevantI agree with the principle and as Runner Ref has said, the thread I was replying to probably had more to it with it being Real Madrid than just the incident involving the 6 match ban. I don’t think a 6 match ban is overly lenient for this particular incident in professional football because the object missed. However, had the Referee been hit/hurt then I would have expected to see a ban at least double as a minimum.
I agree with you in theory but the precedence is set by law of the land the minimum sentence for attempted murder is less than murder same issue here.Why should his punishment be less because he wasn’t accurate? He’s attempted to throw something at an official, whether he hits him or misses him should be irrelevant
Why should his punishment be less because he wasn’t accurate? He’s attempted to throw something at an official, whether he hits him or misses him should be irrelevant
I don't agree in theory or practice.I agree with you in theory
I know this was in Spain, but in England there are three grades of offences against match officials.Why should his punishment be less because he wasn’t accurate? He’s attempted to throw something at an official, whether he hits him or misses him should be irrelevant
Don’t get me wrong, I’m not questioning how the conclusion is reached. But if an a player attempts to throw something at an official it should be irrelevant if he hits him or not. The only failure there is accuracy but the intent was the same. He wanted to hit him, he just simply missed. Throw the book at them (and don’t miss)I don't agree in theory or practice.
The punishment for "attempting something bad" like this should be severe. The punishment for actually "committing something bad" like this should be more severe.
Look at this the other way around. Let's say they gave him 6 months here. And then there is a similar incident in a few weeks with the only difference being the object actually hitting the referee. We'd all be expecting a heftier punishment for the fact that the object hit the referee this time. No one will be saying the fact that the object hit the referee is irrelevant.
I get that. He should be severely punished. And I agree with that part. What doesn't sit well with me is that if someone else does the same and doesn't miss, s/he should get an even bigger punishment, not the same.Don’t get me wrong, I’m not questioning how the conclusion is reached. But if an a player attempts to throw something at an official it should be irrelevant if he hits him or not. The only failure there is accuracy but the intent was the same. He wanted to hit him, he just simply missed. Throw the book at them (and don’t miss)
This is getting ridiculous. I was only able to dip in & out of the game, but from the significant parts of the game I did watch, he looked an excellent referee having a very good game & dealing very well with players & player antics. When players & club representatives are involving themselves in this sort of charade, they come across as unprofessional & sour grapes. As to the changing of his mind to award a penalty to Inter just before half time, as well as turning down penalty claims for handball by an Inter defender, both were of course subjective, but I had no issues with either outcome. Barcelona have let themselves down in my eyes. Whatever happened to dignity in defeat.Looks like Barca have decided to follow Madrids lead......
Barcelona point the finger at 'Madridista' referee after Inter defeat https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/f...tml?ito=native_share_article-nativemenubutton