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Taking One For The Team?
#1
Aside from my amazement that top defenders now seem to have little idea that their primary duty is to stop the ball entering their own net, and that goalkeepers may now be able to pass like Johnny Haynes and execute a Cruyff turn, but are consistently unable to prevent goals that would have had me hanging my head in shame at the top of the Sunday League fifty years ago, I wonder that among the 184 different tamperings David Elleray has been responsible for since he was put into power as a reward for preventing Chesterfield reaching an FA Cup Final he hasn't thought of doing something about the pointless bureaucracy of bookings.

Bookings, a bit like Philip Larkin's mum and dad, ucfk the game up.

Sometimes they are doled out like peanuts on a short haul flight. Other times they are used as a serious punishment. A quick winger will hit the ground dramatically as soon as he sees a full back in the hope of getting him an early booking that will then deter him from tackling. A concrete full back will consider hitting the flier early doors to deter him before the ref' is ready to administer any booking at all. It's nonsense. If then the referee comes up with a soft booking, and minutes later the booked player, caught up in an innocuous challenge for a ball, is adjudged have committed a foul, he is SENT OFF. Down to 10 men and the game as a spectacle is ruined - it'll be just attack versus defence. And as an extra bonus there is the pointless administration of recording the bookings and counting them up to 5 so persistent offenders can then be suspended at further administrative cost.

The worst aspect of the booking is the way it has come to be regarded as an occupational hazard, by players, managers and pundits. Even a proper player like Jermaine Jenas will advocate TAKING ONE FOR THE TEAM. So your team looks like being caught on a quick break, you are last man just inside your own half, that Adama Traore has the ball and there's acres of space. You chop him down. Harmless free kick. You nod when Mr Atkinson waves his yellow card. He might as well wave his willy for all the notice you are taking. Five minutes later, Traore again chasing for a ball, your full back is gaining a serious close appreciation of the quality of Traore's shirt. Another harmless free kick, a second booking. Jimenez is on the ball thirty yards out, loads of runners, options everywhere, he's blocked off. Bit of a chance for Neves with a 30 yard free, but it's worth it and another booking. And the very same pundit who commented on taking one for the team notes that the cynical opposition seems to be doing a good job of cramping Wolves' crowd-pleasing style.

SO, my note to Mr Elleray and those like him, who want to tamper with the game until they can determine whether one of Jack Grealish's eyelashes was offside before he rounded the keeper and backheeled that ball into the net, is try doing something to make the game more fun to play and more enjoyable to watch. My suggestion is SCRAP BOOKINGS. If a a player commits a serious enough offence to have been worth a booking, especially if it is done to benefit his team, let Mr Atkinson wave his yellow card at that team's bench. Instead of having THREE substitutions available they are down to two, so the team suffers and if you take one for the team you literally do. Referees will still be able to send off players for one serious offence or for persistent infringements. Managers will be far less willing to instruct their players in the dark arts, if the flexibility of the team is immediately reduced. Players will have more respect for the game and opponents and, if of course, the referee waved his yellow card when a player simulated being fouled then that player would have disadvantaged his own team by cheating (a much greater risk than a potential booking for something he could easily avoid repeating).

Of course if a player commits an offence after all substitutions available have been used then that does have to carry over to the next game, so the team would be allowed only two subs next time out...... which would involve some minor administration. And yes apparently David Elleray has apparently been involved in 184 changes so far.
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#2
You talk some sense Dev. Problem is its David f'in Ellery you are talking about. He doesn't have a modicum of common sense. The game is going away from its ideals. Its up to the fans to cancel their Sky and BT subscriptions. Watch things change then.
Big Bore Exhaust = Small Dick
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#3
I'd agree completely if it weren't for the fact that lots of clubs, beloved by their fans, would be collateral damage.

And it isn't just Elleray, bookings became a waste of time once wages across the country made the fine for being booked become insignificant even for amateur players. My view is that if Mr Atkinson, who I use as an example because I think he is an excellent referee, took a player aside and gave him and his captain a stern warning that next time there'd be consequences ...... that might work if the consequences were really serious and losing the ability to make substitutions would make teams pay. At the moment a booking is either nothing, or a disaster if a player later gets caught out again for what is often a truly minor infringement. You might as well let VAR roll a dice.

I got booked once. We were playing Barlow in a "big game". We were infamous for our offside trap, which operated almost at the halfway line. To make it a success we had two very fast defenders who could cover if it went wrong, but this match we had neutral linesmen and we had no confidence in the bloke running our line. So I told our back four if the trap broke down I'd stop the attack (as keeper) but it would cost me a booking, so I couldn't do it twice. Local football attracted supporters back then. Barlow brought two coachloads to Newbold Road, our car park was full of cars, Newbold Rd was littered with parked cars, some were even down on Highfield Lane. There were Barlow villagers all round the ground. As usual we went off like a train and were all over them. We were good and played some nice football and our high offside trap meant Barlow could hardly get out of their own half. Perhaps 20 -25 minutes in the linesman did exactly what we feared and missed a really obvious offside, and the ref was waving play-on. Barlow were away. They even had a couple of supporting players behind the man on the ball. We'd had it ..... except, as we played the offside, I was permanently stationed on the edge of the area for the ball over the top. So as I'd promised I came way out of my area and when their bloke pushed the ball into the open space to the side of me I rather gently rugby tackled him to the floor and apologised nicely. I'm sure the howls from the Barlow villagers could have been heard back at The Peacock, if there'd been anyone left behind. The ref' booked me as I knew he would and there was a free kick we defended easily. At the time if what you'd done wasn't dangerous and didn't involve swearing, you didn't get sent off. I was only perhaps 19 and I was booed and hated throughout the match by the crowd, but what I'd done had worked. We scored only a few minutes later. The linesman never lost concentration again. And unusually for us we maintained our grip on the game, never let Barlow back in and ran out 2-1 winners. WE OUGHT TO HAVE LOST. I RUINED THE GAME FOR ALL THOSE PEOPLE WHO CAME TO SEE BARLOW WIN. I CHEATED AND ALL I GOT WAS a £5 fine. It meant nothing, but the fact I cheated still does. I used to walk at cricket. I don't cheat. I'd turn myself in now to Martin Atkinson for a bollocking.

Now endemic, persistent, minor cheating is regarded as the way to stop better teams playing. A booking means nothing, less than it did 50 years ago. With the huge squads some clubs carry five bookings and a suspension is just an occupational hazard, another one you should take for your team. So you have had my confession and Barlow villagers will probably be pleased to learn I can still hear them shouting at me as we left that field victorious. It didn't help that towards the end I pulled off a couple of good saves to rub salt in the wound.
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