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What is your review of the UCL 17-18 SF match between Bayern Munich vs Real Madrid (1-2)?

Madrid were very very lucky to get the win.Defensively, we looked shaky as hell. Carvajal had a horrible game. Couldn't control Ribéry at all. If Bayern hadn't lost Robben to injury in the first few minutes the result would have been very different.Because Robben went off, Mueller had to play out of his position. He isn't very good as a winger. But even then, the number of chances he had before the goal, there should have been a couple more goals by Bayern. Ribéry was also extremely unlucky to not have his name on the score sheet.With Boateng getting injured too, Hummels seemed out of it. He was losing the ball too much. Not the best of games for him.Coming to the Bayern goal, Madrid were caught off guard. Ramos is so experienced, and yet he made a rookie mistake. The defence wasn't the best. I dont think we could have handled Robbery yesterday night.Playing Ronaldo as a lone CF was an iffy decision. He isn't as young as he used to be. Dont get me wrong, he is still one of the best finishers in the game even now (the disallowed handball goal should be enough proof), but now his pace has reduced, so defenders can keep up with him a lot more. Benzema + Ronaldo would have been more effective I feel.Marcelo's goal was beautiful. It's almost as if Bayern never thought he would take the shot. If you go back to the replays, you see Ronaldo sort of getting into position for an overhead kick, then the ball falls to Marcelo, and there is just a slight lull where the defence is unsure and BAM! Wonderful left foot strike.Asensio's goal is a demonstration of the sheer magnificence that is Real Madrid's counterattacking football. It just takes one slip up on the field. He is going to be an asset for us in the future.So on to Bernabeu for the 2nd leg. Bayern isn't going to take the loss lying down. And after Juve's away game performance in the QF, I don't think the Madrid team is going to be taking it easy over a 2-1 lead.Hala Madrid! Onwards to La Decimotercera!Edit: I do mean Robbery, as in Robben + Ribéry. Please stop suggesting edits on that, thanks.

Who are the officials of handball and what are their duties?

The official and their duties:-1Two referees with equal authrinty shall be In charge of each game. They shall be assisted by a score.-take,and a timekeeper The two referees alternately play the role of court,', referee and line referee.1Two referees with equal authrinty shall be In charge of each game. They shall be assisted by a score.-take,and a timekeeper The two referees alternately play the role of court,', referee and line referee.2Duties of the referee.The court referee he checks the appearance of the players, dresses and finger nails he checks the ball and other equipment h'e conducts the toss for the teams to choose ends he controls and enForces the rules of the game he cautions the players '. he penalizes any inFringement he keeps scores / records of the game2Duties of the referee.The court referee he checks the appearance of the players, dresses and finger nails he checks the ball and other equipment h'e conducts the toss for the teams to choose ends he controls and enForces the rules of the game he cautions the players '. he penalizes any inFringement he keeps scores / records of the game3he takes notes of warnings, suspensions', exclusions and disqualification. he gives the timekeeper the signal to stop andstart the clock he ensures that the score sheet is correctly completed after the game he decides wlren the playing time is to be interrupted and resumed3he takes notes of warnings, suspensions', exclusions and disqualification. he gives the timekeeper the signal to stop andstart the clock he ensures that the score sheet is correctly completed after the game he decides wlren the playing time is to be interrupted and resumed4The duties of the scorekeeperhe checks the teams' lists he is in charge of the score sheet and makes appropriate notes (goal, warnings, suspension exclusion etc.)4The duties of the scorekeeperhe checks the teams' lists he is in charge of the score sheet and makes appropriate notes (goal, warnings, suspension exclusion etc.)5The duties of the time keeperhe keeps control of the paying time he keeps control over the number of players and officials on the substitutes benches he keeps control of the suspensioh time of the players the time keeper stops the game at half time and at the end of the game with a clearly given signal.5The duties of the time keeperhe keeps control of the paying time he keeps control over the number of players and officials on the substitutes benches he keeps control of the suspensioh time of the players the time keeper stops the game at half time and at the end of the game with a clearly given signal.6Explanation of the following terminologies Guarding. the ac of preventing an attacking player from getting or throwing the ball the act of protecting the ball in the air or ground from reaching one's goal area6Explanation of the following terminologies Guarding. the ac of preventing an attacking player from getting or throwing the ball the act of protecting the ball in the air or ground from reaching one's goal area7Feinting• the act of deceiving an opponent or making a deceitful movement to enable one move away with the ball7Feinting• the act of deceiving an opponent or making a deceitful movement to enable one move away with the ball8Controlling bodyWorld International Handball Federation (I,H.F.) Headquarters - Switzerland AfricaConfederation oFAfrican Handball (C.A.H.B.) Headquarters Abidjan Cote D'ivoire Nigena Handball federation of Nigeria (H.F.N.) Founded in 1972.8Controlling bodyWorld International Handball Federation (I,H.F.) Headquarters - Switzerland AfricaConfederation oFAfrican Handball (C.A.H.B.) Headquarters Abidjan Cote D'ivoire Nigena Handball federation of Nigeria (H.F.N.) Founded in 1972.Reference:- the Officials and Duties - Handball

What are some of the best soccer moments?

The first one is Wales v Scotland and that Kenny Dalglish goal at a rocking Anfield that took Scotland to Argentina in 1978.Jordan's handiwork 25 years onJordan's handiwork 25 years onEven today, reliving the events of a cold and damp night on 12 October, 1977 will depress and infuriate Welsh footballfans.It is twenty-five years since Wales faced Scotland in a 1978 World Cup qualifier, and yet a small piece of Joe Jordan's anatomy still gets under the skin.Having already beaten group rivals Czechoslovakia 3-0 at Wrexham, a win over Scotland would have taken Wales within touching distance of qualifying for the finals in Argentina.The Scots had already lost 2-0 in Prague, and so Mike Smith's men sensed their chance - even though the home match would be played on foreign soil.Following crowd trouble in Cardiff during Wales' game with Yugoslavia the previous year, staging the game at Ninian Park was out of the question.It was obvious that it was Jordan who handled the ballWales goalkeeper Dai DaviesIn their infinite wisdom, the Football Association of Wales decided to stage the crucial match at Liverpool's Anfield home rather than in Wrexham in order to secure more money from a larger crowd.And full house is exactly what they got - but unfortunately for the Welsh, the Tartan Army had travelled down in force. So the scene was set for a what promised to be a memorable night in Welsh football history - and that is exactly what transpired.Both sides had plenty of chances to score in a open and pulsating encounter, but the score remained goalless as match reached the closing stages.But then, in the 78th minute came the fateful moment and Jordan's piece of handiwork.The Scotland striker rose with Wales defender David Jones to challenge for Asa Hartford's long throw into the Welsh box, and then to the astonishment of the Welsh fans and players, French referee Robert Wurtz awarded a penalty.Jordan kissed his fist after winning the penalty. Television replays clearly show it was Jordan's and not Jones' hand deliberately flicking the ball towards goal, but Mr Wurtz had made his decision.Don Masson coolly slotted the penalty past Dai Davies, and with Kenny Dalglish adding a second goal ten minutes later, the Wales dream was over.Unsurprisingly, Davies vividly remembers the whole sorry episode like it was yesterday."It was obvious that it was Jordan who handled the ball," he told BBC Sport Online."He was wearing a long sleeved shirt whereas Jones had short sleeves."I immediately ran towards the referee and lifted nine fingers to indicate that it was Jordan - their No 9 - who had touched the ball with his hand."After the match, we were all bitterly disappointed. Two years of hard work had been wasted because of one mistake by a referee."Davies recalls the anticipating and the excitement which had gripped the players."Everyone in the Wales squad was talking about Argentina and Patagonia," said Davies."Rob Thomas and Terry Yorath were very keen on horse racing and had received an invitation to meet some horse racing people for Argentina - so there was plenty of looking forward."The squad were staying in near-by Llangollen, and as the team bus travelled into Liverpool, everyone was amazed to see so many Scots on the streets."As we came onto the pitch, we had a massive shock as we saw blue everywhere," he added."We knew there would be a great deal of Scots coming down, but we were expecting to see more red in the stadium."The Scottish fans were a bit hostile when Wales were attacking.Wales fan Dylan Llewelyn, who was 11-years-old back in 1977, was equally amazed to be surrounded by Scottish rather than Welsh fans when he took his seat with his father in the stadium."Seeing all these Scottish fans drinking beer in the streets of Liverpool was a bit of a shock for an 11-year-old boy from Pen Llyn," he said."Our seats were for the front row of the Cemlyn Road stand and I was disappointed to see a lot of Scots around us. And as I looked towards the Kop, I could only see a small section of red."I remember the Scottish fans were a bit hostile when Wales were attacking - Alan Rough made a great save from Toshack which proved crucial."But once Scotland went ahead, their supporters wanted to hug us and shake our hands."He claims that most of the fans - both Welsh and Scottish - were unaware of Jordan's handball."The incident was too far away for us to see from the stand," he added."But the following morning, everyone on the school yard had seen the television replays and we were absolutely furious."To rub salt into the wound, Jordan to this day refuses to own up to his piece of trickery.Famously, Diego Maradona claimed it was the 'hand of God' that intervened in the 1986 World Cup when he scored a dubious goal against England least Jordan has made any such ludicrous statements; but even 25 years on, he still has little hope of finding any crumbs of forgiveness.Wales: Dai Davies, Rod Thomas, Joey Jones, John Mahoney, David Jones, Leighton Phillips, Brian Flynn, Peter Anthony Sayer, Terry Yorath, John Toshack, Mickey Thomas.Scotland: Alan Rough, Sandy Jardine, Willie Donachie, Don Masson, Gordon McQueen, Tommy Forsyth, Kenny Dalglish, Asa Hartford, Joe Jordan, Lou Macari, Willie Johnston.Att: 50, 850.The second great memory is Nottingham Forest’s European Cup win over Malmo in 1979.We got our first colour tv especially for the event. And it looked like football from the future. A technicolor vision and those adidas strips that were so ahead of their time, confirmed an enduring love affair for the golden period of that brand. Design-wise there was no point of reference anywhere else and that’s why people love that period of football, trainers and three-stripe strips so much. If memory serves me correctly, that classic Forest strip was the first use of a technical fabric for strip production.Seeing it all in colour, from across the world in Scotland, was for a football fan, something genuinely formative.Frozen in time: Forest v Malmo, European Cup final, 30 May 1979Frozen in timeForest v Malmo, European Cup final, 30 May 1979Trevor Francis of Nottingham Forest heads the winning goal past Malmo goalkeeper Jan Moller.Photograph: Peter Robinson/EMPICS Sport/PA PhotosTom LamontSunday 3 May 2009 00.01 BSTIt was, everyone involved admits, a terrible game, heavy on offsides, with the tall, imposing Swedes of Malmo instructed to negate the silky skills of Brian Clough's exciting Nottingham Forest.But the real story of 1979's European Cup final in Munich, 30 years ago this month, was in the numbers: the first football final boasting a £1m reward, featuring Britain's first £1m footballer in Trevor Francis. He scored the game's only goal, this stumbling header, and Forest lifted the cup, their first of successive wins in the competition.1. Tony WoodcockThe striker was a Forest player from the start of his career, and witnessed the arrival of Brian Clough in 1975 - a change that transformed the club from Second Division fodder to First Division and European Cup champs in just four seasons. Woodcock moved to Germany in the summer of 1979, flitting back and forth between FC Köln and Arsenal over the next decade before retiring at 35.He now runs a business development company with former team-mate Viv Anderson.2. Ingemar Erlandsson"We were underdogs," says the defender. Malmo were sent out by English manager Bob Houghton to defend stolidly and try to snatch a goal but it wasn't to be. "Trevor got on the wrong side of me to score. What a run!" Most of the Malmo team from that night, he says, are still involved with the club in some way; Erlandsson himself is a member of the board. Now 51, he owns a company that supplies Morrisons with its bread ovens.3. Trevor Francis"The £1m man puts his name on the score sheet, and returns a great deal of the cheque," said commentator Barry Davies after Francis headed home.His transfer fee had been big news - not that Clough acknowledged it. "As soon as Trevor arrived," Garry Birtles tells OSM, "the manager sent him to make the lads a cup of tea." Injury kept Francis from Forest's subsequent Euro final in 1980, and he left for Man City in 1981 for £1.2m. He is now a panellist on Al Jazeera Sports.4. Garry BirtlesBirtles's story wouldn't look out of place in a comic strip. "Three years before this game I was playing for non-league Long Eaton," the striker recalls."To be in a final from nowhere felt unbelievable, especially as a local lad." He even won an award from Roy of the Rovers magazine for his rapid rise ("Trevor Francis presented it to me dressed as Santa Claus").Birtles, who played more than 200 games for Forest, retired in 1991 and is now an analyst on Sky.5. Jan MöllerThe goalkeeper had been instrumental in the improbable European Cup charge of this small club from southern Sweden, one based on hard-line defensive tactics that team-mate Erlandsson calls "a revolution in Swedish football". Möller had a good game, too, before failing to collect this crucial cross. The stopper later played for Bristol City and Toronto Blizzard and then, like so many of Malmo's players, found his way back to the club, where he now helps to train the goalkeepers.6. John Robertson"A very unattractive young man," Clough once said of Robertson (now Martin O'Neill's assistant at Aston Villa), "but give him the ball and a yard of grass, and he was an artist." A yard was all the Scottish winger needed against Malmo, finally squirming into space in the second half to loop in this cross. "Playing Malmo was like Land of the Giants," remembers Birtles. "All six-foot-plus. But we knew with Robbo on the left we'd get one chance."

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