Fifa satisfied with refs????

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • SamsNCharge99
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 10-22-08
    • 41242

    #1
    Fifa satisfied with refs????
    Associated Press
    JOHANNESBURG -- Brazilian star Kaka wasn't even looking at Kader Keita when the Ivory Coast player made the tiniest amount of contact with one of the most mild-mannered guys in the game. That didn't stop Keita from collapsing to the ground, writhing and howling as if mortally wounded.

    Carlisle: New low for world cup refs

    What's worse than France's national team? Try one of their referees, as Jeff Carlisle avers that Brazil-Ivory Coast hit a new low for referee calls. Blog



    It was, at the very most, a foul. But by giving Kaka his second yellow of the night and, with it, an automatic ejection, the referee touched off a new round of criticism. Between the "We Wuz Robbed!" goal that wasn't, the blatant hand balls, or the acting jobs that are so over-the-top the Screen Actors Guild ought to demand dues, it's enough to make anyone wonder what the refs at the World Cup are watching.
    As far as FIFA is concerned, they're watching just fine.
    "We are very, very satisfied with the performance of the referees," Jose-Marcia Garcia-Aranda, head of refereeing for the sport's governing body, said Monday.
    That's one person, at least.
    Questionable calls are bound to happen in a sport that depends on the human eye to right wrongs. It's part of the game's charm, and it gives fans endless ammunition for arguments over a pint or two. Good-naturedly, of course.
    The gaffes at this World Cup have been so obvious, however, and have had enough of an impact on games that Monday's availability with Garcia-Aranda and the referees was an attention-grabber. Never mind that no one would comment on specific calls. Or that France's Stephane Lannoy, who red-carded Kaka, and Mali's Koman Coulibaly, who waved off what would have been a game-winner for the Americans against Slovenia, were "traveling" and unable to attend.
    "In my opinion, the decision-making here has been pretty consistent and pretty accurate," said Howard Webb, one of the most respected refs in the game and a favorite to work the World Cup title game after officiating the Champions League final.
    Try telling that to the folks watching.
    Especially if they saw Kaka being sent off Sunday night. Hardly one of the game's troublemakers, he's a gentle sort who hasn't had a red card in at least seven years. Never in a Brazil uniform.
    "I'm not going to talk about the ejection," Kaka said after the game. "The images tell it all."
    Keita and Kaka both appeared to have their eyes on the ball when they collided. Kaka did raise his right elbow slightly, but it appeared to be more defensive than thuggish. And it certainly wasn't enough to merit Keita's Oscar-worthy histrionics. Keita buried his face in his hands as if trying to keep his eyeball from falling out, crumpled to the ground and rolled around in agony for several minutes while his teammates cried foul.
    Yet when play resumed, there was Keita, looking none the worse.
    FIFA wasn't biting when asked about it Monday -- good thing, because there was a similar incident a few hours later in the Switzerland-Chile game.
    Switzerland played a man down after midfielder Valon Behrami was sent off in the 31st minute with a straight red card, getting tangled up with not one, but two Chilean players. Never mind that the second Chilean appeared to be going down in agony before contact was even made.
    "The red card was not even a yellow card," Swiss coach Otto Hitzfeld blustered after the 1-0 loss, accusing Chile's players of putting on "quite a performance."
    Brazil's Luis Fabiano didn't even bother trying to deny he'd handled the ball on the way to his second goal Sunday night. Even 6-year-olds know goalkeepers are the only players who can use their hands in soccer, yet Lannoy was laughing when he let Luis Fabiano know afterward that he was onto the Brazilian.
    In the U.S. game, Coulibaly's whistle not only nullified Maurice Edu's goal, it penalized the Americans and prompted a wave of outrage. Several days later, the U.S. players were still getting text messages and e-mails about it from folks back home.
    "In some ways it's really heartening to see how much people care," Landon Donovan said.
    Part of the problem, particularly for U.S. fans, is that soccer refs aren't required to -- and rarely do -- explain their decisions. If there's a bad call in the NBA, NFL or Major League Baseball, someone will weigh in within a few hours. Even if it's just to say it's being examined.
    FIFA? Not so much.
    "The duty of the referees is not to explain their decision ... [but to] try to do their best on the field of play," Garcia-Aranda said. "[Otherwise] they are not focused on the game, they are focused on the media."
    While some refs said they wouldn't mind explaining themselves and can even see the merit of it, don't expect it to happen anytime soon. Ditto for other measures that could bring a little more transparency to questionable calls.
    Video replay isn't an option so long as Sepp Blatter is FIFA president, and he's all but certain to be re-elected to a fourth four-year term next year. And the idea of adding an extra set of eyes behind each goal has been kicked into the long grass and not likely to resurface anytime soon.
    "We're all accustomed to the fact that if it's an NFL playoff game and there's a call that's in question, there will be a statement by the league from the referees, but FIFA operates differently," U.S. coach Bob Bradley said. "From our end, we get used to that. And we all have friends and family who ask us the same questions that most of you ask, and you end up saying that's just how it is sometimes, and then you move on and you get ready for the next game."
    In other words, the griping will go on.

    Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press




    I think they started great, but 2nd set of games have been so-so
  • mathdotcom
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 03-24-08
    • 11689

    #2
    Thanks for providing more support to my previous thread about soccer refs having an insane amount of influence on the outcome.

    What a pathetic sport
    Comment
    • Bill Dozer
      www.twitter.com/BillDozer
      • 07-12-05
      • 10894

      #3
      I think Fifa wants them to keep the confidence high until the knockout round. They're hoping all the right teams get through and their best refs step to the forefront. If the USA were to lose against Algeria and not advance, it will be a disaster for them. Kaka can drop kick someone in the knockout round and he'll be in the game.
      Comment
      • Squirrel
        SBR MVP
        • 06-11-09
        • 1316

        #4
        What a load of nonsense - obviously all you're going to hear about the decisions that were mistakes, but they have been VERY few and far between on a broader scale in this world cup.

        Ironically enough I've seen plenty of criticism about having refs from "lesser" nations like Mali and Kazakhstan etc but the worst refs so have been the European ones.

        That article has taken about 7 incidents from a current total of 34 games so far and suddenly decided that all referees are crap, talk about small sample size - also only TWO of those decisions probably had a direct impact on the outcome/result of the game so to say they have "so much influence" is a completely flawed argument.
        Comment
        • mathdotcom
          SBR Posting Legend
          • 03-24-08
          • 11689

          #5
          Very few mistakes?

          You mean 4-5 games decisively decided by ref errors = very few?
          Comment
          • Squirrel
            SBR MVP
            • 06-11-09
            • 1316

            #6
            Originally posted by mathdotcom
            Very few mistakes? You mean 4-5 games decisively decided by ref errors = very few?
            Name me these 4/5 games that were decided by majorly bad refereeing decisions....
            Comment
            • pavyracer
              SBR Aristocracy
              • 04-12-07
              • 82839

              #7
              Originally posted by Bill Dozer
              I think Fifa wants them to keep the confidence high until the knockout round. They're hoping all the right teams get through and their best refs step to the forefront. If the USA were to lose against Algeria and not advance, it will be a disaster for them. Kaka can drop kick someone in the knockout round and he'll be in the game.
              If the US loses to Algeria they would have been eliminated even if the US beat Slovenia assuming there is a winner in the England/Slovenia game. So even if the US beat Slovenia they couldn't afford to lose to Algeria. Now if the US draws with Algeria they would have advanced with the Slovenia win. But ask yourself this question. If the US doesn't beat Algeria do they deserve to advance?
              Comment
              SBR Contests
              Collapse
              Top-Rated US Sportsbooks
              Collapse
              Working...