Think it was koscielny for Arsenal and Costa for Chelsea today this weekend both score overheads and were inches away from taking defenders heads off .
I can't see how they are allowed ,is it just because it looks good
Any refs out there with a view on it
1
Comments
There is a quote from the great Danny Blanchflower.
'It he puts his head down, don't disappoint him '.
Refs judgement I would have thought.
Grey area but I think they are a wonderful thing when pulled off so keep it as is (nobody knows)
Moment they stoop to head the ball they've got to be prepared they're going to be potential kicked
Technically speaking I suppose it is dangerous play but you can't ban it, would be taking away a techical facet of the game which requires timing, athleticism, eye coordination and instinct.
Don't tell Jonatan Johannson about this thread.
Technically speaking I suppose it is dangerous play but you can't ban it, would be taking away a techical facet of the game which requires timing, athleticism, eye coordination and instinct.
Don't tell Jonatan Johannson about this thread, there's a 65% chance he'll come looking for you.
He might run after me like he's going through treacle too.
when someone goes for a ball above the knee with foot up its dangerous but now cos it looks good with an overhead it's ok up to the neck .
Defenders have to get a kick in the head to get a free kick otherwise it's let go , ridiculous
Ok if no one around but to me it's dangerous and shouldn't be allowed (especially when it's Chelsea and Arsenal scoring them)
#killjoy
I remember playing one Sunday morning when a did a diving header to head the ball off a defender's foot about a foot from the floor. I won the ball and never got a boot in the face. The ref blew for a free kick for dangerous plat against me. Followed by me telling the ref he was wrong in giving them a free kick. The defender just looked at me and thought I'm marking a right nutter.
"Playing in a dangerous manner is any action that, while trying to play the
ball, threatens injury to someone (including the player themself) and includes
preventing a nearby opponent from playing the ball for fear of injury.
A scissors or bicycle kick is permissible provided that it is not dangerous to
an opponent".
It is clearly down to individual referees to judge any such potential incident and thus one can only assume that in the Costa case, the referee deemed it wasn't dangerous. It seems the Swansea players agreed, in that I didn't see any of their players protesting.
look at the video of it, Costas foot is high and catches the swansea player and even the no.17 pulls his head back
that was clearly dangerous play but because it looks good they let it go
2.05 on youtube below