Originally posted by: -Sunshine
FIFA had to treat every match equally.. that is why we had hydration breaks even in matches where the stadiums were air conditioned or the temperature was only 20 C. Otherwise, some teams would have gained an unfair advantage by being able to replan their strategies during the breaks.
Regarding which teams can enter the USA and which cannot, FIFA had already clarified that this does not fall under its jurisdiction to decide.
Trump wanted to show the world that anyone can dance to his tunes. I'm interested to know how much of a bribe the FIFA president received.
VAR will always be controversial. In front of the media, Portugal manager Martínez was explaining the VAR decision to rule out Croatia's goal in detail only bcoz that decision favoured his team.
Yes the hydration breaks were all about being equal, but several coaches and players have come out and said that it doesn't bring equality but rather upsets the flow of the game and that they should have stuck to having it only in matches where it was required.
FIFA has, in the past, demanded a lot of exceptions and requirements from host cities and countries and gotten it. This time around it was the opposite. USA made demands and FIFA bent to it. At the minimum, FIFA could have demanded that playing countries' staff and coaches be allowed in. Fans being banned is one thing, a player being banned for a criminal case is another thing, but rejecting a full team and then only allowing the players in is politics at its best.
I am very much interested to know what Trump holds over the FIFA president. It isn't just a bribe given everything the president has done. Do the 2 know each other because of Epstein?
VAR being controversial is one thing. If VAR goes against your team, then it's wrong for you but not in general. But this time around there's been actual documented proof of it being wrong in general. In the group round, when Switzerland got a penalty and scored in it, there was adequate proof from retired professionals that it was never a penalty to begin with. The move to use VAR to disallow goals due to the "build-up" to the goal has been proven by retired professionals as being intrusive and having no objectivity to it. How do you tell if something that happened 30 seconds before a goal was a block or just a regular part of the game? Yes, of course, VAR awarding a penalty to one team will not make the other team happy, but that's different. The true pushback has been on the actual intrusive decisions. It was there in 2022 as well and the same feedback was given then, but looks like FIFA took the feedback and said "well now we're going to be even tougher".
Edited by Minionite - 7 hours ago