Frankopan je napisao/la:
db je napisao/la:
dovoljno je pogledat komentare u svim živim medijima, na prste jedne ruke se pronalaze ljudi koji nalaze opravdanje za ovakvu predstavu suca, sve je prepuno memova, karikatura, sprdnje na račun fife i brazilskih reprezentativaca, slaba utjeha, ali barem je cijeli svijet vidio.
bojim se da naši ne potonu poslije ovog, nadam se da će kovač u njima probuditi inat, jer sigurno nije lako izgubit na ovakav način
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I što imaš od toga? Utakmica je završena, Hrvatska je na 0 bodova i treba se itekako pomučit za proć dalje. A ima toga poprilično za ispravit što je krivo napravljeno.
Ponavlja se ista priča ko i prije 8 godina kad su nakon Brazila svi jedni drugima kurac gladili i govorili kako nema šanse da se sad ispadne pa se ispalo.
Je, sudac je bio loš i pogurno Brazil, al nije ni Brazil bio NK Osijek. Držali su nas u 30 metara skoro cijelu utakmicu, imali su svoje šanse.
Ovo je završena priča. Što se duže bude kenjalo o ovoj utakmici to će se manje spremat za iduću. Ako su igrači toliko uvjereni da su bili bolji neg sad to pokažu u preostale 2 utakmice pa nek se potrude da opet nalete na Brazil i nek se onda osvete.
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Slazem se 100%
Ali ipak. Daily Mail. Jest tabloid, ali sto je, je.
FIFA only have themselves to blame, therefore, for this fresh round of slander and negativity. They are now regarded as a rogue organisation – an administrative axis of evil, if you will – and it is a very small step from believing events around the game are corrupt, to thinking the same applies to the game itself. The need for Brazilian success here has been universally agreed and the disgust with FIFA is now so great, all too many can imagine them facilitating results like any other backdoor deal. Of course, if FIFA were so desperate to ensure Brazilian progress they would surely not have placed them on a potential collision course with Spain or Holland – both of whom could be a real threat on this evidence – in round two, but logic won’t get too much play over the coming weeks if there are too many repeats of travesties like this.
It wasn’t that the best team didn’t win – they did – but the way it happened left a sour taste. Nobody should be more grateful for Oscar’s late intervention than Mr Nishimura.
Start with the decision on Neymar, the mildest of his three calamities. In the 27th minute, Neymar jumped for a ball with Luka Modric. Before he leapt, however, he glanced across to check the position of his opponent and, when he went up, poked a forearm in his face. The look was the key. Referees will sometimes let such incidents slide if a collision appears inadvertent, but Neymar knew precisely what he was doing. So did Croatia, who reacted instantly. Nishimura brandished a yellow card but could just as easily have reached for red.
To give him the benefit of the doubt he might not have seen Neymar appraise the situation and merely thought him guilty of dangerous play. It would certainly have been a brave man who sent off Brazil’s hero in waiting in front of his home crowd less than 30 minutes into his first World Cup game, and as we were to discover Nishimura was not about to upset the locals.
Brazil’s penalty was, undoubtedly, the turning point of the night. It came in the 71st minute and if one positive comes from it this will be the last we see of this referee for a good while. Brazil were on top at the time but labouring. Croatia were not a goal threat but were holding fast at the back and a gutsy draw was beginning to look a real possibility.
At which point Fred – not as exciting a forward as his name suggests, by the way – backed into Dejan Lovren and then fell beneath the merest contact from the Croatian defender. Nishimura needed no second invitation to do the bidding of the Arena Corinthians and pointed to the spot. Brazil’s No 10 did the rest.
There may even be a question over the legality of the Brazil’s penalty. One fluid movement is required of the taker and Neymar jockeyed to the left, stuttered and half-stopped before shooting, but goalkeeper Pletikosa’s hands were not strong enough to resist. He got at least one to the ball but could only divert it into the goal, rather than around the post.
By the time Ivan Perisic had put the ball into an unguarded net, with seven minutes remaining, only for Nishimura to blow for a very soft foul on goalkeeper Julio Cesar, it was wholly apparent the way this match was going.