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That ARing for the Liverpool goal is about the worst I've ever seen too. I can't get my head around what he was doing.
Video here: https://www.goalsarena.org/en/video...04-02-2019-west-ham-united-1-1-liverpool.html
in a roundabout way! rather be wrong the right way than right the wrong way?!!?!? haha
yikes...we can all see what he did there and have all done it...just don't expect that from the top level.
I thought I saw AR1 a few times (including this) watching the ball as it was kicked and being very late to look along the line.It seems now people are on to Salah and his diving antics the Premier League are trying to help Liverpool with offiside goals, the one at the end to Origi is plain embarrassing, i cant believe a PL official can get that decision that wrong.
Clear view, great position and ball not traveled a long distance and its still a yard and a half off, if you pause the clip after 5 seconds when player plays the pass hes even got the line of the penalty area to help him.
I thought I saw AR1 a few times (including this) watching the ball as it was kicked and being very late to look along the line.
I know I rely loads on the sound of the kick so I can look along the line when contact is made. I’m wondering @Ciley Myrus how it goes in throbbing stadia and where you look and what you hear???
I suspect at that level you have 100% faith in the two that you work with every week to handle their responsibilities. I'm not sure Friend would ever want to get involved in a straight forward offside call at the risk of confusing his assistant who is an expert in making those decisions. Friend may well have assumed the right back kept him on etc - especially seeing the AR's position, he may have assumed he was in fact in-line and so Milner was on.With the goal it was so far offside you do have to wonder if Kevin Friend could have got involved. Not overrule, but he's looking across at an angle so could he have said something like "that looks a mile off Simon, are you sure". If there were any doubts in Beck's mind, and I'm sure there must have been, he'd have had the flag up in an instant I suspect.


I suspect at that level you have 100% faith in the two that you work with every week to handle their responsibilities. I'm not sure Friend would ever want to get involved in a straight forward offside call at the risk of confusing his assistant who is an expert in making those decisions. Friend may well have assumed the right back kept him on etc - especially seeing the AR's position, he may have assumed he was in fact in-line and so Milner was on.
I really don't think Friend could have anticipated this, I don't know his position but I suspect he was not looking left towards the penalty area, he had no way of knowing in that split second how out of position his assistant was.Am near alone in preaching we should, at least mentally, referee without ARs, the same as we do with them. There will be one time a season where as ref, you really do know best. This was Mr Friends one. Shirked responsibilty and pushed it all onto the AR as an easy, if accepted , get out card.
Agreed. There are a lot of things you can batter KF for from this match - I thought he was incredibly slow to get his cards out, very inconsistent regarding his level of what amount of contact was acceptable, and seemed to completely ignore pushing under a high ball almost every time.I really don't think Friend could have anticipated this, I don't know his position but I suspect he was not looking left towards the penalty area, he had no way of knowing in that split second how out of position his assistant was.
One thing he doesn't do is glance at his line, even watching play for ball in/out, you can have a quick glance to get an idea of where the players are, he's just so fixated on the ball.Covering offside here means you possibly miss a close ball going out but I'd rather take my chances on that one rather a chance of missing an offside. So as AR i'd be looking at the offside line and if possible at play in my peripheral vision.