Thursday, October 19, 2006

Rant 2

Ah. It was perfect. The slow motion replay almost made me cry. The graceful-ness, the perfection, the utter sadness of a great dive. In his defence, he has been a good boy so far this season. He has gone through a lot of tough challenges, including one earlier in the game that seemed to have made him gone dizzy. I am of course talking about Drogba.

His sheer strength is known. Some of the goals he has scored in the Prem have been amazing and his goal in the game yesterday showed his touch. If one thing about his game changed it would be his diving. I mean he has cleaned it up along with C. Ronaldo but its not all the way there for either of them. But the topic of diving isnt just relegated to those two anyway but to the state of the game in its essance.

The best part of the game in its present state is its pace. It goes back and forth and keeps the heart racing for all 90 minutes. But there are different types of dives. There are the fall overs - when the player gets touched a little and falls, these are the most confused. There are the blatants - when they jump and fall over when not even touched, example would be drogba. Then there are those that get fouled but over shadow the foul to draw a card or waste time.

A place to start is with the players themselves. They need to realize how they are hurting the game. Blame needs to rest on their shoulders since they decide to dive and no one else. 2nd comes in the Coaches and Board of Directors. Cause in the end the buck stops there. Clubs can dish out fines for unsporting behavior and coaches can bench people or speak out about their players to the media. 3rd or 4th depending how one counts, in comes the league. Who says they shouldnt review those falls that seem as though the player is acting he is going to lose a leg.

In the end of course comes the referee. He or She is on the field as well. I dont think the first step is with them but it isnt the last either. Leagues need to be there to back up their referees. No chastizing them to the public like Sepp Blatter because they get enough in the media and from their fellow peers. Yes, referees are harsh on fellow referees. At first, a dive is a hard call to make and its hard to give the player a yellow card for such an offense especially if play continues and the referee doesnt want to slow down play. For example the referee gave Henry a yellow for using his arm before scoring against Moscow. Of course the replays show that the ball didnt touch the arm but then again the Referee made the judgement to go against the grain and call something very similar to a dive. In the end they are all simulations of legal play.

thoughts welcomed

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