Jump to content

One Team In Keynsham

Members
  • Posts

    6591
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Everything posted by One Team In Keynsham

  1. Fall-out for Cayman continues: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/31/sports/soccer/fifa-soccer-sepp-blatter-cayman-islands.html http://www.compasscayman.com/caycompass/2015/06/01/Webb-and-Canover-Watson--Same-street-mansions-in-Georgia/ [Canover Watson is a CIFA executive facing an unrelated charge in local courts here re money laundering]
  2. BBC Breaking News: Fifa presidential election Posted at18:15 Prince Ali bin al-Hussein withdraws from Fifa presidential election. Nothing to see here, as you were, move along please....
  3. Have the BBC feed playing whilst at work: even by FIFA standards this has been drawn-out to a laughable degree. And assuming the 2/3rd majority is not reached at the 1st ballot, presumably we sit through the exact same again?
  4. I see that voting has now commenced: would be curious to know if CIFA sided with Blatter.
  5. There are thousands of us......hundreds o...tens of us, I tell you.
  6. How dare you try and take our vote away.
  7. I missed the start of the conference: is this a hope, or a response to one of the facts presented?
  8. This is a link to the DoJ page itself that describes the nature of the case. I would guess that "why now" is much to do with convenience: all, or many, of the parties would likely be in the same hotel for the FIFA Congress. http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/nine-fifa-officials-and-five-corporate-executives-indicted-racketeering-conspiracy-and
  9. To be fair, it's an easy one to overlook, involves a whole mass of studies on climate and the like.
  10. Happy to report the "bloke from the Cayman Islands" is not me.
  11. Sister was there as my proxy, she reported this "Classic comment from the landlord in the pub earlier - I have sold 3 weeks worth of cider in. 2 hrs clearly I did not do my research"
  12. Great old ground that has hosted an FA Cup final, semi finals, England games and a test match. Hope we batter them.
  13. Per the source of all that is true, it appears to be in his remit: Fourth official[edit] The fourth official assists the referee in a variety of tasks, and may be called upon to replace another match official. The fourth official is a recent addition to the officiating crew. English referee and administrator Ken Aston introduced the practice of having a named replacement referee in 1966, but the International Football Association Board (IFAB) did not officially create the position until 1991, and listed only areas of responsibility. The fourth official is simply instructed to assist the referee at all times, and his duties are largely at the discretion of the referee. His usual duties can be broadly divided into assisting functions and a replacement function (see below). The fourth official typically has a table a short distance from the touchline between the two teams' technical areas, however his positioning is not defined by the Laws of the Game. Fourth official indicating there should be a minimum of two minutes of injury-time played In usual practice, the fourth official assists the referee in the following ways: Assisting with administrative functions before, during and after the match; Assessment of players' equipment; Ensuring substitutions are conducted in an orderly manner; Notifying the referee of the details of the substitution, by means of numbered boards or electronic displays (where supplied); Notifying the teams and spectators, by means of numbered boards or electronic displays where supplied, of the amount of time added on at the end of each half, after having been advised of this by the referee; Acting as the contact point between the match officiating crew and any non-participants (such as stadium managers, security personnel, broadcast crews, and ball retrievers); Maintaining decorum in the teams' technical areas and interceding in situations where coaches, bench personnel, or substitutes become agitated; In practice, the fourth official becomes a key member of the officiating team, who can watch the field and players and advise the Referee on situations that are going on out of his sight. The fourth official keeps an extra set of records, and helps make sure the Referee does not make a serious error such as cautioning the wrong player, or giving two cautions to the same player and forgetting to send off the player.[1] The fourth official played a significant role in the 2006 World Cup Final when fourth official Luis Medina Cantalejo informed refereeHoracio Elizondo of the headbutt of France's Zinedine Zidane against Marco Materazzi, resulting in Elizondo showing Zidane a red card and sending him from the field. French manager Raymond Domenech accused Cantalejo of using the replay board to initiate the process that led to Zidane's ejection, which would have broken FIFA rules, but FIFA maintained that Cantalejo did not breach any rules and acted properly.[2]
  14. Missed it live, just seen the replay: he must realise he was very, very lucky a City player seemingly blocked the ref's line of sight. Looked a nailed on red even with the atrocious feed I have.
  15. Pessimist in me always expects some calamitous defeat, but we are doing a good job of proving me wrong so far this season. Will be listening from this side of the pond on Player, sister making sure my ST is used.
  16. Just up, took dog out, now sat twiddling thumbs with Citeh Spurs on in the background.
  17. Vincent Vega tells a different story.
  18. In my view RR has summed up all this story is: assuming Subway stores are franchises, franchisees can stock whatever they want within the terms of their agreement with Subway. If the store doesn't sell what you want, take your business elsewhere. Doesn't bother me, since I already skip Subway for better sandwich options.
×
×
  • Create New...