Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,468 members, 7,819,714 topics. Date: Monday, 06 May 2024 at 09:32 PM

Goal-line Technology: Has It Made Football Boring? - European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Entertainment / Sports / European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) / Goal-line Technology: Has It Made Football Boring? (444 Views)

6 Things You Didn't Know About Goal Keepers. / The Story Behind Leicester City Meteoric Rise To Being EPL Champions -Goal.com / Mourinho Throws Away Community Shield Medal--- GOAL (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply)

Goal-line Technology: Has It Made Football Boring? by YoungestMuller(m): 12:35pm On May 13, 2015

Just take a moment to think of the many
controversial decisions not to award
goals throughout the history of football... The most horrendous has to be not
awarding Tottenham Hotspur a goal in
January 2005 after midfielder Pedro
Mendes hit a 55-yard shot which
Manchester United keeper Roy Carroll
failed to deal with. The keeper caught the ball, but it slipped out of his hand and
dropped more than a yard over the line,
Carroll pushed the ball back out and
neither the referee nor his assistant saw
it despite huge protests by Spurs
players. The incident ignited the need for correct
decisions to be made over goals that
cross the line or not. FIFA had been outspoken over a goal-
line system but not until Frank Lampard
had a goal wrongly disallowed against
Germany at the 2010 World Cup in South
Africa did the governing body really
mean business. Goal-line technology officially debuted at the 2012 FIFA Club
World Cup. The system would decide a
goal for the first time in a FIFA organised
tournament at the 2014 edition when
Honduras keeper Noel Valladares
dropped a Karim Benzema shot on the goal line. The EPL decided to use goal-line
technology for the 2013-2014 season
and the first goal to be decisively
awarded by the system was Edin
Dzeko’s goal for Manchester City
against Cardiff City on January 18 2014. Swansea’s 1-0 victory away to
Arsenal on Monday night had goal-line
technology to thank once again. Bafetimbi Gomis nodded the ball home
from a Jefferson Montero cross but the
effort was palmed away by Arsenal
keeper David Ospina. Gomis was
convinced that it had crossed the line but
Ospina wasn’t. The Colombian number one was proved wrong as it was
signalled via Referee Kevin Friend’s
watch that the ball had crossed the line.
The graphic video replays showed it
clearly too. Had goal-line technology not
been used, the goal might not have been awarded despite being clear. That debate might have raged on for
weeks!
.
Gary Cahill’s equaliser for Chelsea in
the Blues’ 2-1 victory at Liverpool last
November showed how goal-line
technology is a brilliant innovation. TV replays could not ascertain if the ball
had crossed the line because Liverpool
keeper Simon Mignolet had his body
covering the line, yet the referee gave it
by virtue of the system which was
analysed graphically as proof. Had goal-line technology not been
employed, Cahill’s goal might have
brought memories of the ‘ghost goal’
scored by Liverpool’s Luis Garcia in the
Champions League semi final against
Chelsea in May 2005. He poked the ball towards goal with William Gallas
frantically clearing off the line. The
referee gave the goal but Chelsea
players showed their displeasure over
the decision. Football analysts had used
all available resources to analyse the goal but no conclusion was made as to
whether it crossed the line or not. Had
goal line technology been employed
then, the truth would have been known. Goal-line technology has now proven to
be a success as it has been able to
answer those wrong decisions made by
referees but not everyone likes the idea. UEFA has disapproved of it and instead
employed having an official behind goal
but anyone who is conversant knows it
hasn’t been effective. The referee
behind goal failed to spot Marko
Devic’s shot that briefly crossed the line before John Terry cleared in a group
encounter between England and Ukraine
at Euro 2012.
.
So far only the English Premier League
and Major League Soccer employ the
system, but it will be used in the German
Bundesliga from next season. That
means that in other parts of the world,
referee decisions will face errors and more debates will linger. However, the truth is that the human
element is what makes football the
beautiful game it is. Football was invented to prompt
debates! Debating controversies keep
the game intense and interesting. Had Luis Garcia’s ‘ghost goal’ been
decided by goal-line technology, this
legendary debate wouldn’t be
continuing today. It would have been put
to bed at the moment of impact. Goal-
line technology might have removed a bit of the human element in football but
it doesn’t remove the debates that
define the game embedded in the blood
of the passionate fan which aren’t
seen in any other sport.

(1) (Reply)

Video- Highlights And Full Match: Levante 1 – 3 Real Madrid (la Liga) / In Numbers: Is Luis Suarez Better Than Lionel Messi And Cristiano Ronaldo? / Finally Manchester United Officially Sacks Louis Van Gaal

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 14
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.