Their goal last night (8 Viewers)

Calista

Well-Known Member
What’s wrong with it?
He hasn't got two feet touching the ground, so it's a foul throw!

Edit: the point being that in chucking it like that you are effectively striding rather than standing, and the ball will go half as far again. The ball has long gone before his trailing leg comes to the ground. How many other people are hitting the middle of the six yard box with a relatively flat and pacey throw?

I agree that we've got 4 players plus the keeper in that area btw, and nobody gets anything on it, which is rubbish defending.
 
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Sbarcher

Well-Known Member
i still believe the FA should ban towels fr drying the ball at throw ins! its time consuming and slowing down the game.
Never see the towel used in their own half! When at home, we should get our ball boys to nick them when the play is in the other half.
 

Sky Blue Harry H

Well-Known Member
Never see the towel used in their own half! When at home, we should get our ball boys to nick them when the play is in the other half.

He (Furlong) was using the towel in his own half when he got booked for time-wasting (then carried on afterwards drying the ball, before sneaking up the line and gaining a few good yards)!
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
i still believe the FA should ban towels fr drying the ball at throw ins! its time consuming and slowing down the game.
It’s not part of approved equipment. They will be introducing tees for the ball for penalties next.

I’m sure I saw somewhere that both managers have to agree to the availability / use of towels - if that is the case, why would anybody without a long throw merchant agree?
 

Speedie's Head

Well-Known Member
Doyle misses the simplest of headers. I know he could/should be in the U-21 squad along with the others (Bidwell aside, obviously) but there's no excusing that at any level. He also missed a bolt on sitter. It's not his fault but, like the other defenders, he's out of his depth and learning the game at our expense.
 

Sky Blue Pete

Well-Known Member
Doyle misses the simplest of headers. I know he could/should be in the U-21 squad along with the others (Bidwell aside, obviously) but there's no excusing that at any level. He also missed a bolt on sitter. It's not his fault but, like the other defenders, he's out of his depth and learning the game at our expense.
He’s not out of his depth don’t be daft
 

oscillatewildly

Well-Known Member
Calm down everybody - Norwich are going to beat them in the play off semi or final.
We will (hopefully) get another couple of cracks at them next season.
 

Sky Blue Harry H

Well-Known Member
Should have given him another yellow.
It's like the goalkeepers time-wasting. Once the ref has booked them, they know he won't be brave enough to book them again for that same offence. Never seen it yet (although bet it has happened somewhere?!)
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
It's like the goalkeepers time-wasting. Once the ref has booked them, they know he won't be brave enough to book them again for that same offence. Never seen it yet (although bet it has happened somewhere?!)

This came up the other week. Something like one game in South America or something ever in world football. It’s as close to a guarantee as you get. Booking for time wasting is a total waste of time (lol). Bring in the WC injury time rules it’s the only answer.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
He’s not out of his depth don’t be daft

He wouldn’t be anywhere near a promotion chasing team as a first choice centre back in this league
 

Terry Gibson's perm

Well-Known Member
It's like the goalkeepers time-wasting. Once the ref has booked them, they know he won't be brave enough to book them again for that same offence. Never seen it yet (although bet it has happened somewhere?!)


It should be an indirect free kick booking is pointless.

I am going back to the 80’s maybe but I think Pearce scored from a free kick at hr which was given for too many steps by the keeper, but you would have Leighton the Man Utd keeper takes loads of extra steps happy to be corrected if I am wrong.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
With McFadzean next to him he's much better. Without, well, like Panzo he's struggled.

Panzo was still culpable early on. Ball watching at Millwall and he’s been playing spot the ball ever since

Doyle is not a top six defender. He gets caught flat footed a lot - can be weak im the air and struggles for pace

To be fair to robins he admitted they were not the same calibre and experience of last years loans
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Panzo was still culpable early on. Ball watching at Millwall and he’s been playing spot the ball ever since

Doyle is not a top six defender. He gets caught flat footed a lot - can be weak im the air and struggles for pace

To be fair to robins he admitted they were not the same calibre and experience of last years loans

Centre back is a punishing position for a rookie-this is why the defence has fallen apart in the absence of any leadership and experience, with an erratic goalkeeper behind them.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Centre back is a punishing position for a rookie-this is why the defence has fallen apart in the absence of any leadership and experience, with an erratic goalkeeper behind them.

its funny because years ago football was very different and very young centre halves could play against top level centre forwards if any good as they would in any position
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
its funny because years ago football was very different and very young centre halves could play against top level centre forwards if any good as they would in any position
And they still can and do.

But it's true it's more punishing because errors are more likely to be take advantage of while good play goes largely unnoticed by many. As an attacker you can lose the ball loads of times but score a worldie and the world loves you. As a defender you can block, tackle and be in position for the entire game but have one lapse of concentration that lets the opposition score and that's what people largely remember.

But it's very rare you have pretty much all your centre backs as relatively inexperienced. Even in the past you'd have at least one who was 25-26 with a few seasons under their belt. Those that come in and hold their own against top players consistently at a young age are few and far between.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
And they still can and do.

But it's true it's more punishing because errors are more likely to be take advantage of while good play goes largely unnoticed by many. As an attacker you can lose the ball loads of times but score a worldie and the world loves you. As a defender you can block, tackle and be in position for the entire game but have one lapse of concentration that lets the opposition score and that's what people largely remember.

But it's very rare you have pretty much all your centre backs as relatively inexperienced. Even in the past you'd have at least one who was 25-26 with a few seasons under their belt. Those that come in and hold their own against top players consistently at a young age are few and far between.

Funnily enough it was the centre half position I’m thinking of - late 70’s and early 80’s our centre halves often were two players under 22
 

thekidfromstrettoncamp

Well-Known Member
Going back to the thow in.
Law 15 relating to throw in's Is "Procedure 1 At the moment of delivering the ball,the thrower must .STAND facing the field of play. have part of each foot on the touchline or on the ground outside the touchline. throw the ball with both hands and over the head from the point where the ball left the field of play."
Having looked back at the game every rule was broken.When a ref. allows any movement of the feet the laws are broken. Why make rules?
 

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