Re:
Posted: Fri Mar 09, 2012 10:51 pm
Seconded. And we may still have to play Them again in the play-offs."Sideshow Rob" wrote:Just because it was the Red Filth doesn't excuse the behaviour.
Yes it does!
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Seconded. And we may still have to play Them again in the play-offs."Sideshow Rob" wrote:Just because it was the Red Filth doesn't excuse the behaviour.
Yes it does!
So the ideal is a protracted investigation followed by a three match ban imposed the day after the last game of the regular season?"Snake" wrote:Seconded. And we may still have to play Them again in the play-offs."Sideshow Rob" wrote:Just because it was the Red Filth doesn't excuse the behaviour.
Yes it does!
The only thing that is total guff is the way this stupid situation has been exaggerated out of all proportion!"Myles Francis" wrote:Sorry, but IMHO that is total guff. The ball had gone out for a goal kick and Ritchie had no claim to the ball whatsoever."Ancient Colin" wrote:Ritchie was entitled to the ball and the ballboy should have released it.
If the referee felt that the ballboys were deliberately slowing the game down, then he could have taken action to address this - as I've seen them do on other occasions over the years (and even taken towels off them at Cambridge!). And, to be honest, I don't think they were being THAT slow in returning the ball. [Agree that the crowd holding on to the ball was pathetic though].
And just because he subsequently apologised, I don't see how that absolves Ritchie. Strip away the foliage and he assaulted a child, plain and simple. As SmileyMan says, I don't understand how the referee (if he saw the actual incident) could view this as anything other than violent conduct hence my email to the FA.
Their response hasn't answered the two key elements here: did the referee actually see the altercation with the ballboy and, if so, how is it not violent conduct?
So you are telling me that if I push a 14 year old boy I won't be arrested for assault, let alone the impact that this would have on my ability to have a clear CRB and lead my local Scouts group of boys aged 10.5 to 14?"Hog" wrote:The only thing that is total guff is the way this stupid situation has been exaggerated out of all proportion!"Myles Francis" wrote:Sorry, but IMHO that is total guff. The ball had gone out for a goal kick and Ritchie had no claim to the ball whatsoever."Ancient Colin" wrote:Ritchie was entitled to the ball and the ballboy should have released it.
If the referee felt that the ballboys were deliberately slowing the game down, then he could have taken action to address this - as I've seen them do on other occasions over the years (and even taken towels off them at Cambridge!). And, to be honest, I don't think they were being THAT slow in returning the ball. [Agree that the crowd holding on to the ball was pathetic though].
And just because he subsequently apologised, I don't see how that absolves Ritchie. Strip away the foliage and he assaulted a child, plain and simple. As SmileyMan says, I don't understand how the referee (if he saw the actual incident) could view this as anything other than violent conduct hence my email to the FA.
Their response hasn't answered the two key elements here: did the referee actually see the altercation with the ballboy and, if so, how is it not violent conduct?
There is so much I would like to say but I won't as I'm within a year (as of today as it happens!) of my public sector pension!
Except to say that the ball boy wouldn't have been a 'hero' if s*****n had scored during the 10 minutes of added time to take points off us.
And thank goodness no smart talking lawyer has started TechnicalMinorAssaultsOnChildrenAreUs (yet!). Violent conduct akin to the Eric Cantona incident my arse!
If it had been any team other than you-know-who then it would all have been forgotten by now. Or, more likely, wouldn't have happened in the first place.
Embarrassing.
Ahh... A clear crb check. Doesn't make any difference if you want to end up manager of oxford United, just ask rix..."GodalmingYellow" wrote:So you are telling me that if I push a 14 year old boy I won't be arrested for assault, let alone the impact that this would have on my ability to have a clear CRB and lead my local Scouts group of boys aged 10.5 to 14?"Hog" wrote:The only thing that is total guff is the way this stupid situation has been exaggerated out of all proportion!"Myles Francis" wrote: Sorry, but IMHO that is total guff. The ball had gone out for a goal kick and Ritchie had no claim to the ball whatsoever.
If the referee felt that the ballboys were deliberately slowing the game down, then he could have taken action to address this - as I've seen them do on other occasions over the years (and even taken towels off them at Cambridge!). And, to be honest, I don't think they were being THAT slow in returning the ball. [Agree that the crowd holding on to the ball was pathetic though].
And just because he subsequently apologised, I don't see how that absolves Ritchie. Strip away the foliage and he assaulted a child, plain and simple. As SmileyMan says, I don't understand how the referee (if he saw the actual incident) could view this as anything other than violent conduct hence my email to the FA.
Their response hasn't answered the two key elements here: did the referee actually see the altercation with the ballboy and, if so, how is it not violent conduct?
There is so much I would like to say but I won't as I'm within a year (as of today as it happens!) of my public sector pension!
Except to say that the ball boy wouldn't have been a 'hero' if s*****n had scored during the 10 minutes of added time to take points off us.
And thank goodness no smart talking lawyer has started TechnicalMinorAssaultsOnChildrenAreUs (yet!). Violent conduct akin to the Eric Cantona incident my arse!
If it had been any team other than you-know-who then it would all have been forgotten by now. Or, more likely, wouldn't have happened in the first place.
Embarrassing.
I think that be nonsense young man.
Assault doesn't even have to involve physical contact as you will well know.
That the ballboy may not have suffered physical injury is irrelevant. In a civilised society we can't have grown men using physical force on a child. That is just wrong.
You might not like the law, but the law is not decided by you. It is decided by Government responsible to a wider society. And that is the law which must be implemented.
If it had been against any other team, I would say exactly the same thing.
Is it an offence not to report an apparent breach of the law? Genuine question.
Agree. Whole thing has been quite pathetic imho. We won. Can't we just do it in a dignified way. If the boot had been on the other foot and that had been a STFC ball boy hanging on to the ball I would be livid."Beach Road End" wrote:Ball boy was a disgrace in my opinion. I want to beat the scum more than anything but it is unacceptable for employees or representatives of the club (which ball boys are) to engage in petty and petulant cheating. Club should get rid. Embarrassing for the club and fans that think a push warrants emails to the FA need to look at themselves.
Assault isn't about injury. It is about inappropriate use of force or aggression or causing someone to fear inappropriate force or aggression. As I've said before, assault doesn't even need physical contact to be an offence. Use of threatening or abusive language also be assault."Baboo" wrote:My kid is now grown up. Hardly much force involved. A big storm in a tea cup. Amazing how some things get blown up out of all proportion. What injuries has this lad suffered. None.
Agree. The whole 'issue' is a load of baloney. See you tomorrow."Baboo" wrote:My kid is now grown up. Hardly much force involved. A big storm in a tea cup. Amazing how some things get blown up out of all proportion. What injuries has this lad suffered. None.