by Whore Jackie » 07 Apr 2025 12:35
by Greatwesternline » 07 Apr 2025 12:50
Whore Jackie Jeez, so much is being made of the Knibbs / A N Other player penalty routine. Plenty of other clubs do it too. Salah's up to 44 for Liverpool, he's always going to take one, but he never grabs the ball initially. It's not about trying to confuse the goalkeeper. It's about keeping the penalty taker away from all the shenanigans that always happens once the ref awards the penalty. Wareham did the job perfectly fine on Saturday.
by East Grinstead Royal » 07 Apr 2025 12:54
by stealthpapes » 07 Apr 2025 13:04
GreatwesternlineWhore Jackie Jeez, so much is being made of the Knibbs / A N Other player penalty routine. Plenty of other clubs do it too. Salah's up to 44 for Liverpool, he's always going to take one, but he never grabs the ball initially. It's not about trying to confuse the goalkeeper. It's about keeping the penalty taker away from all the shenanigans that always happens once the ref awards the penalty. Wareham did the job perfectly fine on Saturday.
You're only one pedantic ref away from awarding a in-direct free kick to the opposition for time wasting.
I've not seen any other team do what Reading do, where the player has essentially set himself up to take it, and then switches.
It's an interesting tactic development, but i think the extreme they are pushing it to could be asking for trouble eventually.
by Whore Jackie » 07 Apr 2025 13:16
by katweslowski » 07 Apr 2025 13:20
GreatwesternlineWhore Jackie Jeez, so much is being made of the Knibbs / A N Other player penalty routine. Plenty of other clubs do it too. Salah's up to 44 for Liverpool, he's always going to take one, but he never grabs the ball initially. It's not about trying to confuse the goalkeeper. It's about keeping the penalty taker away from all the shenanigans that always happens once the ref awards the penalty. Wareham did the job perfectly fine on Saturday.
You're only one pedantic ref away from awarding a in-direct free kick to the opposition for time wasting.
I've not seen any other team do what Reading do, where the player has essentially set himself up to take it, and then switches.
It's an interesting tactic development, but i think the extreme they are pushing it to could be asking for trouble eventually.
by Silver Fox » 07 Apr 2025 14:27
by Mr Angry » 07 Apr 2025 15:00
katweslowskiMr Angry As a first home game attended in many Years,
Putting aside feasibility or reality, did it make you feel like coming back again and again - in terms of matchday atmosphere and experience? Guessing yes and I ask that because it did feel like a game from the older days - mainly in the second half
by Snowflake Royal » 07 Apr 2025 16:08
Mr Angry As a first home game attended in many Years, quite a lot of nostalgia; from seeing Tim Dellor (and saying good morning to) outside the stadium, to having a chat with the same steward in the Upper West who was always there when I was an STH, to a very decent bacon bap in the Hotel for £5, I thought it was great to be back.
As for the game itself, really scrappy; Reading put themselves about a bit and rattled Wycombe, but we lacked any real cutting edge up front. Frankly, we were fortunate to be level at half time - their striker put through by a poor header back to Perreira had time to take it down and compose himself rather than go for the lob......whilst Wycombe were lucky not to be down to 10 men following the clear retaliation from their #7 (to an admittedly poor challenge by Mbengue). The ref lost control in the latter part of the first half, and needed half time as much as anyone.
The midfield was a real battlefield that neither side won, and as the game went on it was clear that a mistake would divide the teams, which duly came after a trip that was a clear a penalty you will get. Not too sure about all the shenanighans around the taking of the penalty to be honest; all the faffing about wasted 2 minutes which got lumped on at the end of the game, but well taken penalty nevertheless.
Not many Reading players had 8/10 matches, though the class of Bindon is self evident; on the debit side, Garcia looks desperately in need of a rest.
In the end 3 big points and Wycombe nothing to write home about; well organised with a big lump of a central defender, but also lacking a really good forward line. Will need to invest heavily to survive in the Championship.
by Mr Angry » 07 Apr 2025 16:48
Snowflake RoyalMr Angry As a first home game attended in many Years, quite a lot of nostalgia; from seeing Tim Dellor (and saying good morning to) outside the stadium, to having a chat with the same steward in the Upper West who was always there when I was an STH, to a very decent bacon bap in the Hotel for £5, I thought it was great to be back.
As for the game itself, really scrappy; Reading put themselves about a bit and rattled Wycombe, but we lacked any real cutting edge up front. Frankly, we were fortunate to be level at half time - their striker put through by a poor header back to Perreira had time to take it down and compose himself rather than go for the lob......whilst Wycombe were lucky not to be down to 10 men following the clear retaliation from their #7 (to an admittedly poor challenge by Mbengue). The ref lost control in the latter part of the first half, and needed half time as much as anyone.
The midfield was a real battlefield that neither side won, and as the game went on it was clear that a mistake would divide the teams, which duly came after a trip that was a clear a penalty you will get. Not too sure about all the shenanighans around the taking of the penalty to be honest; all the faffing about wasted 2 minutes which got lumped on at the end of the game, but well taken penalty nevertheless.
Not many Reading players had 8/10 matches, though the class of Bindon is self evident; on the debit side, Garcia looks desperately in need of a rest.
In the end 3 big points and Wycombe nothing to write home about; well organised with a big lump of a central defender, but also lacking a really good forward line. Will need to invest heavily to survive in the Championship.
by Snowflake Royal » 07 Apr 2025 17:22
Mr AngrySnowflake RoyalMr Angry As a first home game attended in many Years, quite a lot of nostalgia; from seeing Tim Dellor (and saying good morning to) outside the stadium, to having a chat with the same steward in the Upper West who was always there when I was an STH, to a very decent bacon bap in the Hotel for £5, I thought it was great to be back.
As for the game itself, really scrappy; Reading put themselves about a bit and rattled Wycombe, but we lacked any real cutting edge up front. Frankly, we were fortunate to be level at half time - their striker put through by a poor header back to Perreira had time to take it down and compose himself rather than go for the lob......whilst Wycombe were lucky not to be down to 10 men following the clear retaliation from their #7 (to an admittedly poor challenge by Mbengue). The ref lost control in the latter part of the first half, and needed half time as much as anyone.
The midfield was a real battlefield that neither side won, and as the game went on it was clear that a mistake would divide the teams, which duly came after a trip that was a clear a penalty you will get. Not too sure about all the shenanighans around the taking of the penalty to be honest; all the faffing about wasted 2 minutes which got lumped on at the end of the game, but well taken penalty nevertheless.
Not many Reading players had 8/10 matches, though the class of Bindon is self evident; on the debit side, Garcia looks desperately in need of a rest.
In the end 3 big points and Wycombe nothing to write home about; well organised with a big lump of a central defender, but also lacking a really good forward line. Will need to invest heavily to survive in the Championship.
That was Mbengue! Wow - I assumed it was Knibbs because he got a yellow card.........
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 111 guests