1 Mcnamara
Private Member
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2008
This is kinda linked to the thread “ the end of the beautiful game” and how stale, predictable and boring football can be in the modern era.
One easy change for me, and I’m surprised people with influence ( pundits, club owners, official supporters clubs etc) don’t drive it more, in fact, it’s very rarely mentioned.
Offside , I would think, is there to stop two or three forwards spending the whole match in the opposition box, and the ball just getting lumped up to them, negating any need for midfielders , wingers, passing and tactical nous to be needed. It’s not there to punish a player who goes a fraction before the ball is released after a period of passing and moving to get higher up the pitch.
The main aim of football is ( or was , and should be) scoring more goals than the opposition. The attraction of the game, was never to come away from a nil nil draw, and chat excitedly about how great both defences were, and how disciplined the off side traps were. Goals are everything in football. Now I’m not talking about an American style of sport where there is a score every 2 minutes, but football needs, and must get back to its core objective.
A very simple solution , especially now with VAR , would be , if any part of the attacker is in line with the defender, he is onside. Basically , the exact opposite of what we have now.
It seems so simple. It would discourage teams from being mainly defensive, it would encourage free flowing football, and without doubt it would produce more goals. Defending teams would have to keep going back, creating so much more room in midfield, and the discipline of offside would still be a rule. It’s a no brainer for me.
I suspect the fact that the suggestion dosent get much air time, is because the big teams stadiums around the world are full, because we live in an era of uber glory hunters. But as Yogi would say “ real fitba folk ken “
Have I missed a glaringly open negative to this theory? Of course , I’m not the first person to mention it by any means, but it dosent really get talked about on radio, TV or the media in general. Or if it does , I keep missing it.
One easy change for me, and I’m surprised people with influence ( pundits, club owners, official supporters clubs etc) don’t drive it more, in fact, it’s very rarely mentioned.
Offside , I would think, is there to stop two or three forwards spending the whole match in the opposition box, and the ball just getting lumped up to them, negating any need for midfielders , wingers, passing and tactical nous to be needed. It’s not there to punish a player who goes a fraction before the ball is released after a period of passing and moving to get higher up the pitch.
The main aim of football is ( or was , and should be) scoring more goals than the opposition. The attraction of the game, was never to come away from a nil nil draw, and chat excitedly about how great both defences were, and how disciplined the off side traps were. Goals are everything in football. Now I’m not talking about an American style of sport where there is a score every 2 minutes, but football needs, and must get back to its core objective.
A very simple solution , especially now with VAR , would be , if any part of the attacker is in line with the defender, he is onside. Basically , the exact opposite of what we have now.
It seems so simple. It would discourage teams from being mainly defensive, it would encourage free flowing football, and without doubt it would produce more goals. Defending teams would have to keep going back, creating so much more room in midfield, and the discipline of offside would still be a rule. It’s a no brainer for me.
I suspect the fact that the suggestion dosent get much air time, is because the big teams stadiums around the world are full, because we live in an era of uber glory hunters. But as Yogi would say “ real fitba folk ken “
Have I missed a glaringly open negative to this theory? Of course , I’m not the first person to mention it by any means, but it dosent really get talked about on radio, TV or the media in general. Or if it does , I keep missing it.
