(1) Offside too complex for simple game
Gabriel Martinelli’s disallowed goal at Goodison Park was another example of an offside law that has become almost too pedantic to function.
The decisive action was a square pass from Gabriel Magalhães to Declan Rice that was intercepted by Beto.
The ball ricocheted 40 yards in a completely different direction to Eddie Nketiah, who was running away from goal and gained precisely no advantage from being fractionally offside.
He knocked it back to Fábio Vieira, whose through pass was finished majestically by Martinelli.
The goal was disallowed because Beto’s interception, though deliberate, was not a “deliberate play” under the revised laws of the game.
Instead of the deflection being one of the myriad variables that make football so compelling, Nketiah was technically offside.
Nobody disputed that it was the correct decision, only the extent to which the law is an ass.
When the FA’s Ebenezer Cobb Morley introduced offside in 1863, it was to stop goalhanging, not to give pedants their ikigai. Rob Smyth
(2) Onana sets tone for misfiring United
Will the André Onana billed as a “holding midfielder” in the Uefa technical report of May’s Champions League final please show himself? Manchester United require him, and fast.
The Cameroonian shone as Internazionale went down 1-0 to Manchester City in Istanbul.
Yet in Saturday’s 3-1 capitulation to Brighton, Onana’s long-range passing was awry, leaving colleagues under pressure as his high balls spiralled down, and his radar was so off that possession – along with the initiative – was handed to Roberto De Zerbi’s team.
City’s Ederson is the master of the laser-like delivery that removes four or five opponents and gives the champions one more
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