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Rule changes in football

Lol! No! That was ditched 30 years ago,after only being a rule for a couple of years.

It hasn't been enforced in donkeys years, so they forgot it existed and made up a "new" rule.
Odd and inconsistent - just like you'd expect from that lot.
 
I wonder how long it takes for a team to intentionally concede a corner hoping to draw the opposition up the pitch.
Haha. Train and build a team purely for defending corners and breaking from them — then pass it back to your keeper to try again lol
 
Lol! No! That was ditched 30 years ago,after only being a rule for a couple of years.

It hasn't been enforced in donkeys years, so they forgot it existed and made up a "new" rule.
More like 40 perhaps, the 4-step rule was in effect when I was keeper as a kid.
 
Thought this was quite interesting to see how the offside rule was introduced and changed when the game first became professional…

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"The Premier League’s sporting directors have held talks about the ubiquity of set-piece goals and holding in the penalty area, amid concerns these trends are damaging the spectacle."

This wording perfectly sums up the biggest problem with PL football today. It's not about enforcing the rules correctly, fairly and consistently - it’s about protecting the product and the revenue streams above anything else.
 

"The Premier League’s sporting directors have held talks about the ubiquity of set-piece goals and holding in the penalty area, amid concerns these trends are damaging the spectacle."

This wording perfectly sums up the biggest problem with PL football today. It's not about enforcing the rules correctly, fairly and consistently - it’s about protecting the product and the revenue streams above anything else.

A lot of fans claim to have that view though right.

Aesthetics over effectiveness isn’t a niche opinion.

Also, did they forget the first 150 odd years of English football before the PL came along, that’s just what it was like back then.

I started going to games in the 80’s, it’s was universally a series of goal kicks and corners. The ball spent 99% of the game 30 feet over the players heads.
 
A lot of fans claim to have that view though right.

Aesthetics over effectiveness isn’t a niche opinion.

Also, did they forget the first 150 odd years of English football before the PL came along, that’s just what it was like back then.

I started going to games in the 80’s, it’s was universally a series of goal kicks and corners. The ball spent 99% of the game 30 feet over the players heads.
All fair points. It just sounds hollow when they're so clearly not very bothered about the integrity of the refereeing and clamping down properly on obvious cheating and time wasting.
 
All fair points. It just sounds hollow when they're so clearly not very bothered about the integrity of the refereeing and clamping down properly on obvious cheating and time wasting.

Thats all on the officiating. It’s the players responsibility to win by any means necessary.

If a team finds an advantage they can mine due to poorly worded or badly applied laws, I applaud that.
 
Thats all on the officiating. It’s the players responsibility to win by any means necessary.

If a team finds an advantage they can mine due to poorly worded or badly applied laws, I applaud that.
Rectifying that is on the governing bodies, though. That's where their focus should be. Both on the quality, fairness and consistency of refereeing.

Take for instance time wasting, which has been a major issue since the days of Reyes and Drogba, probably before that. Now you have technology that will expose it. Change the laws, punish it properly, fairly and consistently, and you'd all butt erradicate it.

That's the kind of thing they should worry about, but they probably don't, because it’s part of the "spectacle".
 
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