-
Posts
49,782 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Everything posted by Kaizero
-
He'll do alright, a club like Wolves is probably just about right for his ability in the sense that he'll not improve Wolves and that he ended up at a club like Wolves doesn't feel shocking at all.
-
That the handball rule is fucked up now we can blame 100% on the English and the Scots IFAB has one meeting per year where its members vote over all the alterations/rewording/removal/additions/expansions/limitations suggested by its members since their last meeting. FIFA has 4 votes, as far as I can tell they are the only member of IFAB that has actively submitted suggestions to IFAB over the last 20+ years. IFABs other members are made up of the English FA, the Scottish FA, the Welsh FA and the Irish FA - each of the FA's have one vote, making the total amount of possible votes eight. For a suggestion to be implemented by IFAB into the laws of the game, a minimum of six "aye" votes are required. The Irish and Welsh FA's appear to actually consider each suggestion being put forward, as looking through some of the minutes from the annual IFAB meetings show that they vote "no" to suggestions quite often (as they did when FIFA suggested changing the offside rule into the farce we're witnessing now). The English FA, however, as well as the Scottish FA... I could not find a single time any of the two voted against a FIFA suggestion - which means that since FIFA+England+Scotland = 6 votes, the presence of the Irish and Welsh at these meetings is just a literal waste of time for those two FA's as FIFA know they get all their suggestions through the annual IFAB vote. It's painful that the English and Scottish FA representatives at IFAB quite clearly are bought and paid for by FIFA and blatant corruption is occuring at the most important meeting for all of football each fucking year, because that's what it is. There's no fucking way there has never been a suggestion put forth by FIFA that the English and Scottish FA reps should've voted down, but they never vote against FIFA The fact the Welsh and Irish reps vote against FIFA quite often at those meetings only helps to highlight the blatant corruption The game's fucked, guys. After discovering how IFAB operates I wholeheartedly recommend choosing to stay blissfully ignorant, jumping head first down the rabbit hole will just make you feel like all is lost. There's no way IFAB will end up being able to correct its course and start to give a shit about the sanctity of the rules they're meant to regulate on behalf of the entire world, simply because it's not a money making operation so even though the corruption is clear, obvious and taking place in full daylight - nobody's losing any money from it so nobody that could do something about it will ever care enough to do.
-
Watching England under Southgate is the only comfort I have as a Norwegian, not having seen Norway present at any tournament since the 2000 EC in Spain. Southgate straight up refusing England of their chance to use one of, if not the most, talented generation of footballers they've had to go win a trophy. What Norway is doing is like watching a depressing low-budget indie-movie. What England is doing is like watching the Hollywood remake. The story is the same as in the original, but the Hollywood budget makes it worth sitting through one more time just for the spectacle.
-
It is actually the complete opposite, that decision being made was good officiating. That is of course if the metric used to "measure" good vs. bad officiating is how effectively and correctly a referee enforces the rules of the game. I think the level of competency in the English referee stock compared to other "big" footballing nations is absolutely laughable, don't get me wrong. But the insane amount of factually incorrect absolute idiotic whining about decisions referees have made so far this EC has leapfrogged all of my other pet hates in football, now reigning supreme at the top of my list without a snowball's chance in hell of another pet hate ever overtaking it again It's now reached a level where I couldn't contain myself from actually making a post in defense of Stuart fucking Atwell's refereeing skill - which never would even have been close to happening before all the fucking fucktard whiners started shouting in their echo chambers this EC... jesus fucking christ, the pundits are meant to be "experts" and all they do is say factually incorrect shit to rile up the public for engagement and ad money. I mean, if we imagine a world where money doesn't rule all and informing the general public about the actual fucking problem(s) with football instead of riling them up by spouting bullshit - there'd be a genuine chance that fans would make enough noise and get the actual problem fixed. Fixing the problem would give fans less to get riled up about and result in less viewers/online engagement though, so that will never happen. For clarity: The referees at the EC have, so far, delivered the best performance by referees at a major footballing tournament - at least in my lifetime - when judged on the criteria they're meant to be judged on; how correct they enforce and apply the rules of the game. Now, please re-read the five words in bold at the very end of the above paragraph again. Okay. Now, read it once more, for safety. The problem isn't the referees - the problem with what you're witnessing at the EC is the rules the referees have been ordered to follow and enforce. Pundits should enlighten the public about that fact, not blame referees who are actually, for once, doing their jobs well. Don't get me wrong, I hate the way the rules are at present and I am just as annoyed at the same incidents as everyone else. If we, the fans, want to see those annoyances go away and football be "repaired" - then we're doing ourselves no favours by allowing IFAB to use the referees as scapegoats they can hide behind as they continue on with their apparent crusade intended to fucking destroy the game of football that we know and love. IFAB needs to alter/rewrite the laws of the game. That way referees on the pitch (and VAR teams) won't continue to piss off everyone when they do a good job. (just fyi; @Pata , my rant isn't directed at you even though I quoted your post before going off you're one of the good guys )
-
Only realistic danger that isn't a part of the"fuckin' forrins" hyperbole is those owners taking their toys with them to fuck off to play in the a non-relegation "super league" with their other rich mates to protect the value of their investment portfolios. The way the world is trending at the moment, sure, there's a chance we'll end up seeing the Community Shield turn into even more of a glorified sideshow pre-season friendly than it already is by ending up being played at a venue outside the UK. Other than the actual, real, threat of a breakway "super league" - there just isn't a realistic cause for concern that foreign ownership will ruin football in England. In fact, if I was asked to choose one club in the PL at present whose owners would be most likely to push for scrapping tradition if it meant they could host a cup final or PL games in their "home country" - my answer would be Newcastle. The "threat" isn't American club owners - it's club owners to whom the only thing that matter is turning a profit. Our years under Mike Ashley, an English owner, is the perfect example of how the game could one day actually end up in ruins - 5-6 clubs at the top have rich enough owners to compete between themselves for the league title whilst the rest of the teams are there to make up the numbers and turn a profit for their owners by being "a part of the Premier League", with no ambition or intent to even try challenging for honors. Not woken up properly yet so my apologies if this post is just a complete mess of stray thoughts that doesn't make any sense Halfway through I had forgotten what my initial point was meant to be, as well as why I started typing a response to @toon25's post in the first place...
-
In the shops I've been in over here (Norway), we're front right and centre. In the years since we were last with Adidas, you'd struggle to find a single NUFC shirt for sale in any store selling kits. "Marketed worldwide" doesn't mean they waste product by trying to flog it in areas it won't sell it's why you don't see Flamengo shirts for sale all over the place even though that club have signed the same elite tier sponsorship agreement with Adidas as we have.
-
Swizerland 1-2 Italy Germany 2-0 Denmark England 1-1 Slovakia Spain 2-3 Georgia France 3-1 Belgium Portugal 2-1 Slovenia Romania 3-2 Netherlands Austria 2-2 Turkey
-
Just inferring that it couldn't have mattered that much, as he played in the matches before those two friendlies and has played in all the matches after. He'll not have learnt Spanish in under two months, and the guy is a Villareal player Was meant as a dig at what the Chile manager said, not at you for posting it.
-
That was said when he was left out of Chile's squad for two friendly matches - he's in their Copa America squad, and playing.
-
Using Norway as a comparison, we suffered from similar issues when Rosenborg won the league 13 seasons in a row. When you have one "good" team, that team essentially creates a monopoly when it comes to signing all the up and coming young players - meaning the nation as a whole end up losing out on tons of players that would've become at least half-decent footballers due to never making the grade and breaking through at the club with the monopoly. This is just an assumption as I am not too familiar with the Scottish league, but I can imagine something similar is going on in Scotland with Celtic and Rangers "hoovering" up all the talented young Scottish players, resulting in those not breaking through at those two clubs getting discarded without motivation left. After Rosenborg started falling apart, other clubs in Norway have become great at bringing through young players - which has led to us having more quality players than we've ever had. Just a shame we refuse to hire a manager that know how to utilize the fact we have a golden generation of offensive minded/technically gifted players, instead refusing to sack one of the most defensive minded/kick the ball at the big striker managers in Norwegian football history
-
Why would he want to spend his golden years torturing himself?
-
Southgate's England in a nutshell: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZGeggwk3T/
-
He's in the Chile squad for Copa America and played against Peru, so not that vital after all that he speak Spanish then
-
Looked that guy up on Wiki and this is an amazing anecdote: "After noticing he was half Chilean whilst playing Football Manager, a group of fans began a social media campaign to get Brereton Díaz picked for Chile."
-
This TikTok sums up England perfectly: https://vm.tiktok.com/ZGeggwk3T/ “Sideways. Now backwards. Sideways again. Ouuhh yeahhh! I particulary like it when a player that’s lit up the Premier League all season suddenly act like he’s never seen a football before.”
-
Switzerland 0-2 Germany Scotland 2-1 Hungary Albania 2-3 Spain Croatia 1-1 Italy Netherlands 2-0 Austria France 2-0 Poland England 1-1 Slovenia Denmark 2-2 Serbia Slovakia 1-3 Romania Ukraine 2-1 Belgium Czech Republic 2-2 Turkey Georgia 2-2 Portugal
-
He essentially ensures that the keeper cannot make an attempt at diving after the ball. He'd never have saved it but as the rule is structured, the defender, by taking away the keeper's opportunity to dive for the ball - is clearly "interfering in play". Do I think it should be that way when the keeper would have had no chance regardless? Absolutely not, but here we are I think the rules of the game need a massive overhaul and that them not having been properly updated plays a big part in making VAR not function as well as it should. Well, that and English refs being absolute shitstains, of course.
-
There is not, there are just teams in the "Elite" group that have better overall terms for their sponsorship deals with Adidas than we currently have. As said, the difference in "ranking" 99% applies to what marketing effort Adidas is expected to put in, as well as teams on "lower" rankings not getting certain perks given to the "Elite" group by Adidas. Everything else will have been negotiated on a team-by-team basis. Really confused by why there seems to be so much confusion about this on here, widely available online what the different Adidas sponsorship "levels" include for clubs 🤷🏼♂️ Adidas has an overall sponsorship deal with the MLS, which gives the MLS teams the same perks that all the "Elite" teams get, bar worldwide marketing.
-
Explains why that question hasn't popped up again then
-
Read the last paragraph one more time, Flamengo is the only non-European "Elite" team. It's not consistent and it's not meant to be consistent, perks given each team vary based on the individual sponsorship agreements. "Elite" status has more to do with separating the level of effort Adidas will put in when it comes to marketing than anything else.
-
Quick sidenote, "Filippo Inzaghi" is also the answer to one of my all time favourite pub quiz questions: Who's the only player having played in one of the "big" European leagues to have scored against all of the other teams in their league over the course of a single season? Not sure if that's still true though, been more than a few years since I've heard it asked
-
We are ranked as "Elite" by Adidas. You know by looking at the differences between their "Elite" package vs their "Premium" package, most notably that our kits get promoted globally by Adidas themselves and not just nationally (like they do for their "Premium" clubs). We'll also get a confirmation when we get the away shirt reveal, as "Elite" teams are meant to get a long-sleeve version of their away kit (not the home kit). However, Adidas also operate with a ranking system for the clubs within each of their sponsorship tiers and more perks are given the clubs at the top of those rankings than the ones below. As far as some light online takes me, it looks like Bayern Munchen, Man Utd, Arsenal and Real Madrid form some kind of Adidas "Big Four".
-
Italy: Filippo Inzaghi France: Zinedine Zidane Spain: Raul Holland: Edgar Davids Germany: Miroslav Klose Brazil: Ronaldinho Argentina: Hernan Crespo Portugal: Luis Figo Norway: Roar Strand