• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

Are you going to follow the FIFA World Cup 2006 games?

  • Yes, I'm a real soccer fanatic.

    Votes: 39 43.3%
  • Yes, As long as the US is still playing.

    Votes: 23 25.6%
  • No, I like soccer, but I'm more interested in the NBA, NHL, and/or MLB.

    Votes: 7 7.8%
  • No, The only football I'm interested in is one played with a ball that has pointed ends.

    Votes: 21 23.3%

  • Total voters
    90
  • Poll closed .
I really think they need to eliminate penalty kicks for the final. These guys won't play again for awhile anyway. Somebody always says, "They can't play forever!" Sure they can. And everybody will watch.

The only problem with having a sudden death OT without PKs is that both teams will conserve their energy so the OT might end up being more boring.
You could liberalize the substitution rules for OT, but then, teams will end up doing nothing during the last 15 minutes of regulation, b/c they know that if they just hold on, they will be able to substitute at will in OT.
 
Upvote 0
I really think they need to eliminate penalty kicks for the final. These guys won't play again for awhile anyway. Somebody always says, "They can't play forever!" Sure they can. And everybody will watch.

The only problem with having a sudden death OT without PKs is that both teams will conserve their energy so the OT might end up being more boring.
You could liberalize the substitution rules for OT, but then, teams will end up doing nothing during the last 15 minutes of regulation, b/c they know that if they just hold on, they will be able to substitute at will in OT.

Or as I heard a soccer analyst say on ESPN this morning, have the penalty kicks before the game so the players on the team who may be on the losing end of that, barring a tie, know where they stand when they start and may change their strategy if they know they can't win on penalty kicks.
 
Upvote 0
Or as I heard a soccer analyst say on ESPN this morning, have the penalty kicks before the game so the players on the team who may be on the losing end of that, barring a tie, know where they stand when they start and may change their strategy if they know they can't win on penalty kicks.


Yeah, but then penalty kicks will factor into EVERY game, because 1 team will play differently if it knows it can play for a tie.
 
Upvote 0
tibor I hate PK's too, but after 120 minutes of running, the chances of useful offense decrease dramatically (especially late in the playoffs).

It's clear the worldwide soccer community embraces feigning injury, which is disappointing b/c it was completely the opposite in MI HS competition. It seems their promise to crack down on diving was a bunch of hot air. Earlier in the world cup the announcers called out fakers, yet Balboa praised the france player for selling that foul well (at full speed, i don't blame the ref for making that call).

I believe if you stay down for longer than 5-10 seconds, you should be required to come off the field and remain off for a good 10 minutes.
1. Why carry, what 25?, on a team if you can only make three substitutions. Let them sub like our HS kids... speed up the game, cut down the injuries, get the paramedics off the field.
with unlimited substitutions, coaches would kill the clock by subbing constantly. We had one rival HS coach who did that regularly.
 
Upvote 0
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/storie...L_ZIDANE?SITE=WBNSTV&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DE


Zidane Wins World Cup's Best Player Award

ERLIN (AP) -- France captain Zinedine Zidane, sent off for headbutting Marco Materazzi late in Sunday's World Cup final loss to Italy, won the Golden Ball award for the tournament's best player.
The results were released Monday morning in Berlin by FIFA.
Zidane polled 2012 points in the vote by journalists covering the tournament, beating Italians Fabio Cannavaro (1977 points) and Andrea Pirlo (715 points) in the ballot.
Zidane, who put France ahead with a penalty kick in the opening minutes, was given a red card after slamming his head into Materazzi's chest during the tense second period of extra time.
<!-- BEGIN MEDIA BOX NUMBER 2 --> <table align="right" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="180"> <!-- BEGIN MEDIABOX 9449275 --> <!-- $Id: MediaBox.java,v 1.5 2005/06/15 16:32:32 mike Exp $ --> <tbody><tr> <!-- BEGIN MEDIABOX LEFT SIDE SPACER --> <td>
spacer.gif
</td> <!-- BOX_BOTTOM MEDIABOX LEFT SIDE SPACER --> <td><table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"> <!-- BEGIN PACKAGE 516317, 'X_BEHAVIORAL_SPORSUB5' --> <!-- $Id: Package.java,v 1.5.2.1 2005/05/12 17:55:36 mike Exp $ --> <!-- BEGIN HTML FRAGMENT ID 3879 --> <!-- $Id: HtmlFragment.java,v 1.2 2005/04/13 16:09:33 mike Exp $- --> <tbody><tr> <td><script language="Javascript" src="http://hosted.ap.org/specials/AP_Tacoda_AMS_DDC_Header.js"></script> <script language="Javascript"> AP_Tacoda_AMS_DDC_addPair("SECTION", "SPORTS; SOCCER") </script> <script language="JavaScript"> AP_Tacoda_AMS_DDC("http://te.ap.org/tte/blank.gif", "1.0") </script>
blank.gif
</td> </tr> <!-- END HTML FRAGMENT ID 3879 --> <!-- BEGIN PACKAGE ITEM VERTICAL SPACER --> <tr> <td>
spacer.gif
</td> </tr> <!-- END PACKAGE ITEM VERTICAL SPACER --> <!-- END PACKAGE 516317 --> </tbody></table> </td> <!-- BEGIN MEDIABOX RIGHT SIDE SPACER --> <td>
spacer.gif
</td> <!-- BOX_BOTTOM MEDIABOX RIGHT SIDE SPACER --> </tr> <!-- BOX_BOTTOM MEDIABOX 9449275 --> </tbody></table> <!-- END MEDIA BOX NUMBER 2 --> It was his last act as a professional player and one that was widely criticized in France and abroad.
With the score locked 1-1 after 120 minutes the French missed Zidane's prowess in the penalty shootout, which Italy calmly won 5-3 to collect its fourth World Cup title.
Zidane, 34, a former international player of the year and 1998 World Cup champion, announced last month that he was retiring from soccer after the tournament.
He wasn't particularly outstanding in France's opening draws with Switzerland and South Korea and missed the last group match against Togo due to suspension. But Zidane produced some vintage performances in the wins over Spain, Brazil and Portugal in the knockout phase.
Voting for the 2006 Golden Ball closed at midnight Sunday. In previous tournaments, the ballot has closed at halftime in the final and the winner announced soon after the match.
Italy captain Cannavaro could be considered unlucky in the voting.
He led an Italian defense that conceded only two goals in the tournament: an own-goal against the United States and Zidane's penalty.
The final was his 100th cap for Italy.
<!-- BEGIN MEDIA BOX NUMBER 4 --> <!-- END MEDIA BOX NUMBER 4 --> "I got my award, that's it right there," Cannavaro said, gesturing toward the World Cup trophy sitting on the table in front of him. "I'm extremely pleased with what I have."
With fellow central defender Alessandro Nesta injured, Cannavaro played every minute of Italy's seven games.
Many pundits tipped Cannavaro as the winner, including 1986 winner Diego Maradona.
"Fabio Cannavaro was the best player of this World Cup," the Argentine great said. "Yes, it was a tournament without one dominant player, but Fabio was huge."
<!-- BEGIN MEDIA BOX NUMBER 5 --> <!-- END MEDIA BOX NUMBER 5 --> Germany goalkeeper Oliver Kahn won the Golden Ball in 2002. Other previous winners were Brazilians Ronaldo (1998) and Romario ('94) and Italy's Salvatore Schillaci ('90).
Germany striker Miroslav Klose was the Golden Shoe winner for the tournament's leading scorer. He won with five goals. Ronaldo won the award in 2002 with eight goals.
 
Upvote 0
why is the German crowd cheering for France now and booing for Italy? I guess Nazis like cheap shots.

Actually, they didn't show the headbutt on the scoreboard at the stadium and it took place away from the action. They didn't show it on the scoreboard so that the refs wouldn't just look up and see what happened. My guess is that no one really saw the entire series of events that happened with the headbutt. Besides, before the headbutt, Zidane was the French soccer god who could do no wrong.
 
Upvote 0
I'm amazed that Zidane won the Golden Ball after what he did yesterday. It was a very close vote, but like Cannavaro said, he wouldn't trade trophies.
 
Upvote 0
Actually, they didn't show the headbutt on the scoreboard at the stadium and it took place away from the action. They didn't show it on the scoreboard so that the refs wouldn't just look up and see what happened. My guess is that no one really saw the entire series of events that happened with the headbutt. Besides, before the headbutt, Zidane was the French soccer god who could do no wrong.

I thought they did show it on the scoreboard. Why else did the crowd erupt in booing before Zidane got red-carded, but after Materazzi got up, and how come the crowd wasn't surprised when he did get booked? Not that it mattered cause the ref met with the line judge to make the decision anyway. Oh well, and now for the funniest thing I've seen today:

zidane.gif


All in all, sad and dissapointing. I know Materazzi and the Italian team in general weren't exactly playing the cleanest in the World Cup (McBride getting clocked? yeah, that was an accident), but to do THAT ^ is ridiculous. I was rooting for Zidane and France but not after what happened.

Edit: Got the image working again.
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0
the US announcer at the game said IT was shown. But I read one editorial from cnn or msnbc which said that the replay wasn't shown.

Given the German crowd reaction, I'd have to believe that it wasn't shown. BEcause I can't imagine they would be cheering for France at that point.
 
Upvote 0
I love hearing the media whine about Zinedine Ze-dumbass "Aw, it's so horrible that his wonderful career ended this way..." as if he had nothing to do with it, like it was just some freak occurence. His career ended that way because HE MADE IT end that way. I'm glad he won the Golden Boot, and I hope he has it displayed so that every time he looks at it, he can remember the Cup final he got thrown out of and cost his country the game.
 
Upvote 0
Why else did the crowd erupt in booing before Zidane got red-carded

After that incident I noticed that the crowd was decidedly against Italy. Perhaps it was that way all game (I was in a bar and the sound was not that good). Anyone else see it the same way?

like it was just some freak occurence

This is not the first incident of its type in his career.
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top