Breaking Down the 3 Red Cards in LA & FC Cincinnati's Backheel Goal that was Disallowed



Andrew Wiebe and Charlie Davies are back for another edition of Instant Replay. They break down the most controversial plays of this mid-week edition.

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21 opiniones en “Breaking Down the 3 Red Cards in LA & FC Cincinnati's Backheel Goal that was Disallowed”

  1. its the legend himself, thelittleowl1. lets go.

    1. under that directive, yes its a red. under my english understanding of the rules, this is not a red card. probably a yellow for me for a reckless challenge.
    2. thats disgustingly dirty. clear red.
    3. defo a second yellow. i understand his reaction tho for sure.
    4. looks out of play from what i can see. not clear and obvious tho. great finish as well.
    5. theres not enough contact for a penalty and the theatrics really dont help.
    6. a very very hard yellow. stays on his feet in this case so im fine with the yellow.
    7. foul for me.
    8. this just looks like a good tackle. no contact at all on the man. dive.

  2. 'Avoid unnecessary concussions for goalkeepers'. The keeper literally leads with his head toward feet instead of leading with his arms or body. This is clearly a keeper who knows the rules and is actively TRYING to get players booked. Also, what specific previous injuries to keepers are there rules designed to protect against?

  3. when we're giving red cards for technicalities we're looking at the wrong things. wtf. Also, BY DEFINITION, according to these biased commenters, if the teams and coaches knew it, that means the GOALIE knew it, and knew that diving head first would create this opportunity.

  4. Dallas should've had a pk there. Embellishment or not, the LAFC player stuck his leg out into the attacker to slow him down well after the ball went past him. There's multiple giveaways – some LAFC players immediately look at the ref and slow down after the contact was made.

  5. There's literally an elbow in Cabral's back while Charlie says there isn't a push. Waa-??

    There was an identical play the week before that checks off Charlie's boxes. Nothing called.

    Maybe this rule's existence isn't arbitrary, but its enforcement definitely is. PRO and MLS needs to step up their consistency.

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