扬善抑恶

扬善抑恶,把中华民族好的一面发扬光大,揭露批判不利于中华民族发展富强的因素,这才是真正的炎黄子孙情。
个人资料
正文

2010世界杯的裁判,是史上最烂的(图, ZT)

(2010-06-27 19:57:41) 下一个

2010年世界杯是否史上最好的,或者最烂的,每个人可能有不同的看法。但是,2010年世界杯的裁判是史上最烂的,可能多数人会赞同。世界杯赛程刚刚过半,裁判们就已经“罪行累累”,还不知道后面裁判们还会奉献什么“更精彩”的表演。

多个精彩合法的进球,硬是被裁判给“吹”出来。比如说美国对斯洛文尼亚的制胜球,就是被裁判从球门里面吹了出来。美国对阿尔及利亚的第一个进球,也是被裁判吹了出来 -- 那可是关系到小组出线权的关键比赛。

最精彩的裁判表现是,16强淘汰赛,英格兰打平德国的进球,球越过球门线至少半米,还是被裁判吹了出来。。。




裁判不仅会把进球吹出来,也会把球吹进球门 ---- 本届裁判真是攻守俱佳!

拥有“上帝之手”的马大帅,在世界杯上的人品真是惊人的好。他自己可以考上帝之手击球入门,弟子们也领会大帅的精神,在越位几米的地方把球打入球门,还“骗过”裁判,使之吹哨认可这个“飞来”之球。

还有足球王国巴西,也被裁判吹进一球:9号法比亚诺用前臂停球,然后送球入网,裁判吹哨欢呼。事后,小法根本没有否认他用手臂停球的事实。

裁判有时手痒脚痒,就把场上的队员“吹”下去一个,以便自己成为场上第22号“运动员”。

巴西队的核心人物,就是被裁判一口气“吹”出了赛场,而且连带着下一场也不得上场。当时,在无球状态下,卡卡用手肘推了一下走向自己的象牙海岸队员----精彩一幕出现了,被推在腰部的象牙海岸队员,立即双手捂着脸,痛苦的倒在地上。黑衣法官立即主持正义,红牌罚下卡卡。实际上,卡卡的动作可以看做是自我保护,不被靠近的对手冲撞,最多吹一次犯规。反而是那个假摔的象牙海岸队员应该被黄牌警告。

==============================================================

是否越位,球是否过线,用技术手段实在是太容易判决了,只是那些老爷们是否愿意这样做。

丑陋的国际足联,应该与时俱进,迅速改革裁判体系。从1966年世界杯决赛的球门线争议,到2010年世界杯,45年了,国际足联的老爷们就是不改。网球改了(用鹰眼装置,球员可以挑战司线员的判罚),篮球改了(回放,确认进球有效,或者犯规,或者是谁最后触球出界等),就是足球不改。

前不久,足联刚刚决定,不对现行裁判办法做任何改动。真是死硬,僵化的一群人,早晚会把足球“搞死”。

================================================================
(ESPN)
BLOEMFONTEIN, South Africa -- A World Cup beset by controversy over referees' questionable calls -- or lack thereof -- was hit with another in the first half of Sunday's second-round match between England and Germany when officials failed to give England a goal on a ball that clearly passed the goal line.

With England trailing 2-1 in the first half of Germany's 4-1 victory in the round of 16, a shot from Frank Lampard from just outside the penalty area hit the crossbar and bounced down, but referee Jorge Larrionda of Uruguay did not award a goal.

Replays showed the ball had crossed the goal line by several feet. After landing inside the goal, the ball spun back to German keeper Manuel Neuer.

"It was one of the most important things in the game," England coach Fabio Capello said. "The goal was very important. We could have played a different style.

"We made some mistakes when they played the counterattack. The referee made bigger mistakes."

Germany coach Joachim Loew didn't argue with Capello's points.

"What I saw on the television, this ball was behind the line," Loew said. "It must have been given as goal."

Larrionda and assistant referee Mauricio Espinosa were not made available to comment. FIFA said in a statement that it "will not make any comments on decisions of the referee on the field of play."

The moment recalled a famously controversial goal from the 1966 World Cup final between England and Germany.

In that game, England and Germany were tied at 2-2 in extra time when Geoff Hurst's shot struck the underside of the crossbar, bounced down and spun back into play. That time, the referee consulted his linesman, who awarded the goal.

Hurst went on to score a third goal in England's 4-2 victory at Wembley.

But Sunday's was a gaffe that has become par for the course in this World Cup and will surely touch off a new round of criticism, despite Germany's pulling away in the second half.

There was also:

• In the Argentina-Mexico second-round match Sunday that followed England-Germany, Carlos Tevez scored on a short-range header midway through the first half to give Argentina a 1-0 lead. But replays showed Tevez was clearly offside. A discussion between the referee and assistant referee ensued with players gathered around in a frenzy. But the goal was ruled to stand.

• Brazilian star Kaka was automatically ejected against Ivory Coast after making a minor amount of contact with Kader Keita to draw a second yellow card of the game.

• In the final group game for the U.S., Clint Dempsey scored in the 21st minute off the rebound of Herculez Gomez's shot. But the goal was called offside. Replays indicated Dempsey was in a fair position.

• 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.

• Brazil's Luis Fabiano didn't even bother trying to deny he'd handled the ball on the way to his second goal last Sunday night.

• In a first-round Group A match between Mexico and France, Javier Hernandez appeared to be in an offside position when he ran onto Rafael Marquez's pass and went around goalkeeper Hugo Lloris to give Mexico a 1-0 lead in the 64th minute.

• Fabio Quagliarella thought he scored a late equalizer for Italy -- the loss eliminated the defending champions in the group stage -- but he was ruled offside by the smallest of margins, a ruling that was disputed by the Italians and appeared to be an error on replays.

• Australian forward Harry Kewell was sent off in the 24th minute against Ghana after blocking a goal-bound shot with his upper arm. The arm was pinned against his body, but Swiss referee Roberto Rosetti showed Kewell the red card in the first-round match.

And of course there was the "We Wuz Robbed!" goal that wasn't for American Maurice Edu against Slovenia.

Koman Coulibaly's whistle not only nullified Edu's goal, it 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.

Some refs have said they wouldn't mind explaining themselves and can even see the merit of it, but don't expect it to happen anytime soon. Ditto for other measures that could bring a little more transparency to questionable calls.

Soccer's rules-making panel agreed last March not to pursue experiments with technology that could help referees judge goal-line decisions.

And the idea of adding an extra set of eyes behind each goal has also been kicked into the long grass and is 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 last week. "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."

 
[ 打印 ]
阅读 ()评论 (1)
评论
yimei1926 回复 悄悄话
Totally agree! For example, Australian two cases too!

If they don't change such situation, nobody is interested in World Cup any more!!!
登录后才可评论.