Last weekend I
skipped the FA Cup Final to watch something else. In June it is likely that European
International Cup games may not attract viewing. How come after so long, the footie on TV is
gone from a must to a might to a miss?
Is it me or them?
It might be
that squads of gym pumped big men who run faster for longer and be highly
organised in tactics and especially defence may have made the game far more
predictable and less of a joy. Also, watching petulant millionaires is
different from players of the past in terms of identifying with a team.
So if more
people come to feel like this could the soccer boom start to go down instead of
ever upwards? Big money may have been an
attraction in the past, but in the future may the effect on the game of
creating squads of lookalike from anywhere players playing to order and the
book put it beyond the interest of many?
One answer
might be to increase the size of pitches requiring players to cover much more
ground. There is one small snag. That is that virtually all the stadia around
the world are built to the existing size.
What about reducing the number of players, say to nine a side? Possible, but again may not do that much to
help.
Which brings
us to the rules of the game. At present
the highly organised defensive systems mean that half, or even less than that,
of the pitch at any time is available for effective play. Abolish the offside rule and you completely
change the opportunities for attack and require the defences to be more widely
spread.
A secondary
amendment might be to limit the goal keeper to stay within the goal area rather
than the penalty area for handling. This
might be useful but is relatively marginal.
What matters is opening up the game to more movement and changed tactics
for attack.
There are
other issues. The "professional
fouling" that is now common place, tolerated if not expected, is a game
spoiler in many ways. Also the
theatricals that go with it. Were
referees to be allowed and supported in cracking down on this and sending more
off would certainly open up the game for the good.
Would a
cleaner, faster and more open game with the full pitch potential for movement
and attack be the better way of bringing back the spirit of the game into the
football being played?
The picture
above is Sheffield FC of 1857, the first established football club in the
world. The club has played to rules
that have changed or altered many times in the past. In 2017 at 160 years young they should have
no trouble with another.
"Is it me or them?"
ReplyDeleteIt's the petulant millionaires and the aura of greed which pervades the whole circus.
Your football and ours(USA)
ReplyDelete