11 Bravo wrote:
so lets compare this to college football. what you and some others are saying is......
sorry florida,ohio state, usc, etc...... chump university wants to join the league this year and they cannot afford replay technology so instead of getting things right this year we have to suspend replay to cater to them. so all your hard work in building a big time program goes to shit because every kid deserves a gold star.
ya great
Okay, so you're equating the impact of instant replays on two completely different sports, and you're hypothesising a situation where a rule would be suspended, when what you're calling for is a rule to be added. Where's the relevance?
BLdw wrote:
mikkel wrote:
Because one of the appeals of football is that due to the league structure, the rules of football must be the same on all levels.
Rules of the football would remain same.
In the sense that they're written in the same rulebook? Yes. In the sense that comparable situations would be handled the same in the second division as they would in the top division? No.
BLdw wrote:
mikkel wrote:
When you sign up with your friends to play in the lowest national division, then you're supposed to be able play under precisely the same rules and conditions as the best players in the world [...]
We play under same rules but not under same conditions as the best players in the world. Being able to play under same conditions is not going to happen any time soon, unlikely to happen in our lifetime.
As far as the rules of football go, yes, they're the same conditions. A red card in the bottom division is as indisputable during the match as a red card in the top division is. A goal in the bottom division is as indisputable after play has been resumed as it is in the top division. Likewise, a situation in the bottom division cannot be reviewed, just like it can't be reviewed in the top division. When you change that, you change the conditions.
The administrative conditions are different in top football, yes. The quality of facilities, the security on the stadium, the demands on finances, those are all deemed more important the further a club advances. Some of these demands are critical to the sport, the welfare of the fans, and the interests of the players, some of them are not, and those that aren't have mostly caused more harm than they've caused good. To begin fragmenting the rules of football across divisions, particularly rules that are not critical to the sport is simply not something that should be done.
-CARNIFEX-[LOC] wrote:
Highschool, collegiate and semi-professional sports in the U.S. don't utilize the same replay systems that you see in their respective pro sports, but the systems in place still work for all levels of play.
You're comparing apples to oranges. Your comparison will be accurate when a High School team can advance into collegiate leagues, a collegiate team can advance into the primary league, and a primary league team can be relegated to a lower league. Until then it's completely different.
Shahter wrote:
mikkel wrote:
11 Bravo wrote:
why does getting it right have to be compared to league structure?
Because one of the appeals of football is that due to the league structure, the rules of football must be the same on all levels.
but that's the point - the rules
are the same, the rules of
playing the game that is. the problem is with the system in place for
observing the rules, which, apparently, doesn't work the way it's supposed to. "it's been that way for a hell of a lot of years"-argument is, quite frankly, completely idiotic.
The system for observing the rules is part of the rules, You change the system, you change the rules. The argument for keeping it the way that it is seems pretty reasonable when they way that it is has worked for a long time. The sport isn't facing any new great threat, the fan base is only getting bigger, and football is only getting more popular. It just works.
Last edited by mikkel (2010-06-28 11:14:31)