• Welcome to the Cricket Web forums, one of the biggest forums in the world dedicated to cricket.

    You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Cricket Web community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

*Official* Uruguay vs Ghana (Quarter-Final Two)

FaaipDeOiad

Hall of Fame Member
Surely there's a difference between this sort of incident and an ordinary foul. What if Suarez caught the ball and threw it away? One goalline handball is not exactly like another, and in this particular instance we're talking about incredibly blatant one with a very clear reward for the team that did it.

It's really not that far fetched to imagine that there could be a special penalty. It happens in other sports after all.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Basketball, apart from being a crap sport that football should take nothing from ever, has a points-based scoring system. You score a different number of points depending on where you threw the ball from. In football, there's just "a goal", where the ball crosses the line, and "not a goal", where it doesn't. Saying that should change is almost like saying they should be allowed to use their hands.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Haha, well they are allowed to use their hands aren't they? So long as they accept they'll give away a free kick/penalty and get booked/sent off, they can do so as often as they like, you can't really stop them from doing it.
 

Son Of Coco

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
If you awarded a goal in instances like the Ghana match the other night I reckon you'd put a stop to blatant efforts like the one by Suarez.
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
But:

a) football would be less fun, because Uruguay-Ghana had one of the most exciting ends to a match of all time

and

b) you'd be awarding Ghana for something they hadn't done, because the sole aim of football is to get the ball between the sticks and they hadn't done so. You might want to change the sole aim of football, but I don't, because I love football. If you don't you can go invent your own sport and watch that.
 

Son Of Coco

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
But:

a) football would be less fun, because Uruguay-Ghana had one of the most exciting ends to a match of all time

and

b) you'd be awarding Ghana for something they hadn't done, because the sole aim of football is to get the ball between the sticks and they hadn't done so. You might want to change the sole aim of football, but I don't, because I love football. If you don't you can go invent your own sport and watch that.
I think that's one hell of a technicality for Ghana (or anyone else) to lose a goal on.

I just find it funny that the rules are so fondly worshipped whether they give a fair outcome or not. Socially we've moved past 1878 (I just picked that number at random), yet god forbid we change a rule when someone exposes a bit of a loophole. I don't think penalising an incident like Suarez' handball with a goal would irreversibly change the fabric of the game. But then I'm just a very casual watcher.

But you are right too, there are millions of people who love the game and if they like it the way it is then fair enough I suppose.
 
Last edited:

FaaipDeOiad

Hall of Fame Member
I don't really agree that the sole aim of football is to get the ball between the sticks. The aim is to do so without contravening certain rules, much like the aim of cricket is to score runs, but you can only do so in certain ways. For example, you can't score runs in cricket by picking the ball up and throwing it or by firing it out of a cannon, you have to hit it with the bat.

You can't simplify any sport down to one objective as though there is nothing else to take into account, because the whole idea is to achieve X goal while also following restrictions Y and Z.

Again, what if Suarez dived and caught the ball? Is there no kind of handball that might warrant a more serious penalty than a spot kick and a red card?
 

Uppercut

Request Your Custom Title Now!
Hmm, why would it make any difference if he caught the ball rather than punched it off the line?
 

FaaipDeOiad

Hall of Fame Member
Just for the sheer blatant audacity of it. The point being, there is a difference between contravening the rules and receiving an appropriate penalty, and intentionally exploiting a loophole in the rules to win your team a place in the semi-finals of a world cup.
 
Last edited:

Lillian Thomson

Hall of Fame Member
Just for the sheer blatant audacity of it. The point being, there is a difference between contravening the rules and receiving an appropriate penalty, and intentionally exploiting a loophole in the rules to win your team a place in the semi-finals of a world cup.
.......and what happened here was the former............
The not awarding of a goal that hasn't been scored isn't a loophole, it's a 100% correct ideal.
 

Jono

Virat Kohli (c)
I don't think you understand- it's quite difficult to explain. It's not only the rule, it's an absolute fundamental. You might describe football as a game where two teams of 11 try to get the ball between the sticks more often than the other, and the team that does so the most often wins. And you're suggesting changing that completely to allow teams to score without managing to do so.

There are a bunch of ways to score points in rugby, one of which is a penalty try. There are a bunch of ways to take a wicket in cricket, one of which is lbw. But there's only one way to score a goal in football. A goal is when someone gets the ball between the sticks, and nothing else, ever. Any game where the winner is anyone other than the team who gets the ball between the sticks more times isn't football.
And another point in reply to this.

If the sole aim of the sport is to get the ball in the goal, because it is so valuable (as you try and distinguish soccer/football from other sports), then surely cheating to prevent this from happening is even worse than 'goaltending' in basketball for example.
 

Jono

Virat Kohli (c)
I just find it funny that the rules are so fondly worshipped whether they give a fair outcome or not.
It's quite interesting.

I'm not so passionate as to be incredibly disgusted at this or anything, but the arguments against it are pretty flimsy. Would prefer they just say "we like it this way, even if cheating is allowed" - which Uppercut kind of did when he used 'excitement' as a reason to justify what happened.
 

Meridio

International Regular
Just for the sheer blatant audacity of it. The point being, there is a difference between contravening the rules and receiving an appropriate penalty, and intentionally exploiting a loophole in the rules to win your team a place in the semi-finals of a world cup.
AWTA.

Surely, the fundamental rule of football is that you are not allowed to use your hands? I'm not even sure I'd call what Suarez did exploiting a loophole - it's just blatant cheating. While I'm aware there would be difficulties in refereeing it, I can see the case for penalty goals. In situations like this, there is 100% certainty that the ball would have gone in the goal, and the fact that a penalty is awarded is irrelevant - yes, they should score, but they definitely would have scored if not for the handball. Put it this way - if by some strange situation a defender deliberately stopped a certain goal with his hands while outside the penalty box, would a free kick be "sufficient punishment"?

Also, it ****s me to see that he got the standard one-match ban. Yes FIFA, your fair-play spiel is oh so sincere.
 

Jono

Virat Kohli (c)
Haha Fifa's fair play marketing is indeed some of the most laughable stuff I've ever seen come from a sporting body.
 

GIMH

Norwood's on Fire
If you give a penalty goal against Uruguay then Australia concede one against Ghana earlier in the tournament, as Hakon said.

Anyway, serious can of worms giving goals that aren't goals, if you give them for handball on the line you should also give them for a goalkeeper who pulls down a player that has an open goal. And maybe for when the attacker is one on one with the keeper and gets hauled down by the last defender from behind?

The amount of time you hear about things such as Geoff Hurst's second in 66 or Luis Garcia's "ghost goal" against Chelsea suggest that it could cause far, far more problems than it would ever solve. The chances of scoring a penalty certainly shouldn't be "far less than 100%" as Jono said, quite frankly your penalty-taker should always score from the spot and it's not as big an issue as it's being made out to be anyway because as LT has said, the goals are nearly always scored from the spot so no-one bothers to bleat about it. Case in point, Ghana scored their penalty against Australia.

And before anyone comes in and says that it wasn't the same - I'm not interested in debating whether you think it was a penalty or not, but the fact is that as the ref gave the penalty, it is in his eyes the exact same situation as the Uruguay one.
 

Son Of Coco

Cricket Web: All-Time Legend
If you give a penalty goal against Uruguay then Australia concede one against Ghana earlier in the tournament, as Hakon said.
Only if you're applying the same absolutism as 'the ball has to cross the line to be a goal'.

And no, I'm not sure that's actually a word.
 

Top