Ciley Myrus
RefChat Addict
Found this taken last night, wonder if this had anything to do with the decision!View attachment 3234
To be fair, if SAF and Cantona were telling me its a pen....then its a pen
Found this taken last night, wonder if this had anything to do with the decision!View attachment 3234
I wouldn't give it. But i wont have too much of a problem if the referee gave it on his own (or on advice of AR, 4th using comms). My gripe is with VAR getting involved and the once-sided/biased process after that.
Neymar has said it hit his back, I mean that argument falls down straight away. And Tuchels comments gave me a laugh tooI think the one opinion we can discount is the PSG manager, who said it should not be a pk because it was not on target
Also anything that means Neymar does not get to cheat his way to success is fine by me.
Based on the fact that Skomina appeared to look at two replays (one "fast" and the other slow/frame-by-frame) I'd suggest that he didn't see the handling at all initially.On this play, we have no idea what VAR was actually used for (at least, I have seen nothing clarifying this)--did Skomina not know if the ball hit the back or the arm? Was Skomina not sure if it was deliberate? Was he unsure of both?
I am in the no handball camp but the reaction of the player was that of a guilty one.
I mean when he was holding his head in his hands in an "I've been caught" kind of way.While I'm in the PK camp, I don't think the player's reaction tells us much of anything--players know that if the ball hits the arm they might get called for handling. They may not understand the nuance, but they certainly know it isn't a good thing if the ball hit their arm.
It is not supposed to. That is the problem.VAR seems to be used very differently with respect to handling than with other fouls.
You may have had a more accurate feed but I am sure we all had the same. I was paying specific attention to what replay is he going to look at. And I just looked a full match replay for. When he approached the screen it was on a freeze frame. He looked at that for some seconds with the frames going back and forth to show contact. Then it went to full speed for the lead up to the incident but when it got close to the handball it changed to slow motion. Then he had to deal with some team officials. Went back to the screen, looked at two more slow motions and made up his mind. The was no full speed or as you say "fast" replay of the incident. I said this before. The process was completely wrong.Based on the fact that Skomina appeared to look at two replays (one "fast" and the other slow/frame-by-frame) I'd suggest that he didn't see the handling at all initially.
Don't agree with the reaction comment. There was no reaction after the actual contact. The head in hands reaction was after a penalty was given 3 minutes later which is completely understandable when putting a billion dollar team out of the UCL is going to be blamed on something you did (even if you think it wasn't deliberate and it was unfair).
For me the big difference here is the jump - if the players stays on the ground and turns his back, probably would not give it.
In this instance he has turned, jumped and stuck his arm out!
I should point out that my interpretation of DHB here is not always appreciated, as I began my refereeing in England, and still tend to use my 'old fashioned' handballs as the yardstick, or should that be metre rule!!!!!!
I'll raise you Riverdance.View attachment 3236
The only movement i can remember that involves jumping with your arms by your side is Pogo Dancing which became a punk rock thing in the 70s/80s
I must stop agreeing with you!You can easilly argue that the incident in question was handball and not handball. The referee isn't right and he isn't wrong.
That to me suggests that the wording is incorrect, there's simply too many words. Why not remove all the waffle and just have "deliberately handles the ball". Yes the decision still remains subjective (like all decisons) but there's not this inane amount of nonsense written to justify it and for people to obsess over. All IFAB ever seen to do is add to the confusion by adding more wording (silhouette etc). Remove it all.
All the law says is "deliberately handles the ball". If you're psychic, that's great. If not, the idea of offering some guidance on what is likely to make an action deliberate seems like a sensible idea to me.You can easilly argue that the incident in question was handball and not handball. The referee isn't right and he isn't wrong.
That to me suggests that the wording is incorrect, there's simply too many words. Why not remove all the waffle and just have "deliberately handles the ball". Yes the decision still remains subjective (like all decisons) but there's not this inane amount of nonsense written to justify it and for people to obsess over. All IFAB ever seen to do is add to the confusion by adding more wording (silhouette etc). Remove it all.