silver blade
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- Mar 5, 2014
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Is it me that's being thick but if we play Wednesday we have an extra days rest over the teams that play Tuesday. This cancels out the disadvantage of having one days less rest between Wednesday and Saturday.
Still don't like playing Wednesdays for other reasons but that's not the argument being presented here.
3 things to ponder..
1. Today's footballers are more like athletes than the footballers of 30 years ago or more. The footballers of 40 years ago were in teams of 11 with 1 sub. They could play 3 times a week without anyone even suggesting, for one moment, that they might be "tired" and needing a rest - and blaming a poor result on that.
2. Go back further than 40 years and you don't have to go much further to find "professional" footballers who worked all week in another job, then turned up (on public transport) on a Saturday and played out of the skins for the team. They never complained of being "tired". In some cases these blokes had done a week in a steelmill or coalmine.
3. Things "do not" necessarily, or even likely, "even themselves out over a season". There is no evidence for that. It is far more likely that, at any given point in time, one team has more of a "rub of the green" than another. But even so, that is not an excuse, or a reason, for the ultimate results from a season for any team.
If we can just put these totally ridiculous notions to one side for a moment, we might be able to just accept that "tiredness" is a total cop out and has no bearing on the results of a match whatsoever. Even less so thesedays, with huge squads available to choose from and multiple subs.
I’m sensing that you don’t agree then?I've pondered "all" that and it's "bollocks". It's not about whether you're "tired" or not, it's about "whether" you are more or less tired than your "opponent".
And point 3, fuck me.
Agree with the sentiment but there is a logic.
Sky tv are now televising EVERY Champiomship mid week match on the red button.
They’ve copied the Champions League format by randomly splitting the matches in 2, so half the matches are played Tuesday night and half are played Wednesday night, so there’s a bigger chance for viewers to watch more games.
Most clubs traditionally play on a Tuesday night but Sky are offering cash and clubs are more then happy to accept, so of course Sky want a return on their huge investment. So tradition goes out of the window.
Sky want to show a massive choice of matches 7 days a week.
I think there should be a more even split though.
In the mid-1960s, full-backs never went over the half-way line, wingers never tracked back, defenders never went up for corners, and attackers never went back to defend corners. The pace of the game now means that the players are like top-class athletes, pushing their bodies to the limit, and risking muscle and hamstring injuries without proper rest and preparation.In the mid to late 1960's we used to play on Easter Saturday / Easter Monday and then on the Tuesday night. 3 games in 4 days.
I'm sure in those days Sheffield didn't have Good Friday as a bank holiday.
Proper hard core 'business end of the season' of which managers and players never publicly complained about.
Between Blackburn next week and 27th of November we only have to go to Derby, Nottingham and Rotherham. That may be an advantage in itself in terms of travelling / tiredness.
In the mid-1960s, full-backs never went over the half-way line, wingers never tracked back, defenders never went up for corners, and attackers never went back to defend corners. The pace of the game now means that the players are like top-class athletes, pushing their bodies to the limit, and risking muscle and hamstring injuries without proper rest and preparation.
On the other hand, players in the 1960s played on boggy pitches with a ball that weighed a ton when wet, and wore heavy boots. And they had limited medical back-up when injured.
Playing professional sport carries considerable risk. It makes sense in any era for management to try to limit the risks as much as possible.
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