De todo el final de Ozark me quedo con esta escena.
El despertar de Ruth y ver a toda la familia Langmore reunida por Ćŗltima vez fue una manera hermosa de un preĆ”mbulo pesimista hacĆa el mejor personaje de la serie.
šØš£ļø Oliver Kahn on how Bayern Munich got ārobbed,ā pointing to a penalty incident on Joao Neves and a second yellow for Nuno Mendes not given:
āIāve been in this game for decades, as player, captain, and now in the club and I have NEVER seen three clearer decisions ignored in one Champions League night. This wasnāt a football match, this was a robbery in broad daylight and every single Bayern fan knows it.
Letās start with the Nuno Mendes incident. Heās already on a yellow card, everyone knows that. The ball comes in, and his arm is clearly out, thereās a clear handball. Now, we can debate intention all day, but the modern interpretation is about position and impact, and his arm is in an unnatural position blocking play.
That alone puts him in serious trouble. When youāre already booked, you simply cannot take that kind of risk. Itās basic football intelligence. That should be a second yellow card, no discussion. Instead, the referee looks at it and decides⦠nothing. No accountability, no consistency. So what are players supposed to think? That the rules change depending on the moment?
And then we come to the penalty situation, which for me is even more shocking. Vitinha clears the ball, yes but what happens next is the key point. The ball makes contact with Nevesā hand inside the penalty area. I keep hearing people say, āoh, it came off a teammateā, so what? Since when did that cancel out a handball?
The laws of the game donāt say āonly if it comes from the opposition.ā A handball is a handball if it creates an unfair situation, and here it absolutely does. His arm is involved, the ball changes its path, and Bayern are denied a clear opportunity. At this level, with VAR available, how do you not give that?
And then, to top it all off, you book Luis DĆaz for protesting? For reacting to a clear foul that isnāt given? So now we punish players not just with wrong decisions, but for showing emotion about those wrong decisions? This is unbelievable. You are asking players to be robots in moments where everything is on the line.
You cannot tell me Bayern Munich werenāt affected by this. These are game-defining moments. A red card changes everything. A penalty changes everything. Instead, both situations are ignored, and weāre left talking about the referee instead of the football. Thatās a problem.
At this level, the Champions League, the biggest club competition in the world, you expect clarity, you expect courage, and above all, you expect fairness.
Tonight, we got none of that. And if this is the standard, then we have a serious issue in European football, because clubs invest everything to compete here, and they deserve better than decisions like these deciding their fate.ā
Dejar claro que hoy el Bayern estĆ” individual-colectivamente por debajo de su nivel, puede "hacer autocrĆtica sĆ"... pero con marcador igualado no se pueden negar situaciones arbitrales escandalosas que caen LAS 3 EN SU CONTRA y lo que es peor DOS DE ELLAS SON LA MISMA Y SE SEĆALAN "hoy A-maƱana B" perjudicĆ”ndole en las dos, como son estas manos:
En parĆs, mano de Davies = penal
En Alemania, mano de Neves (1 millón de veces mÔs clara) = nada
¿La expulsión de Mendes? Es una 2ª amarilla tan clara como la de Montjuic que no le sacaron...
Y obviamente todo esto va haciendo un gran peso EN CONTRA del Bayern y a favor del PSG en la eliminatoria... solo quita un penal al PSG y pónselo al Bayern y esto podrĆa ir 5-5, ya no te digo dejar con 10 al PSG por torpeza de Mendes... pues va 4-6 y 11 vs 11, el Bayern con poca confianza y el PSG tranquilo...
Es la diferencia
šØš£ļø Thierry Henry:
āReferees deserve respect, but sometimes you just canāt stay silent. Bayern Munich are playing at home, yet it feels like decisions are going against them. A clear penalty situation was ignored, and whatās even more frustrating is that the referee didnāt even check VAR. Thatās hard to understand in a game of this level.
At half-time, Bayern have clearly been the better team. Theyāve controlled the match, created chances, and shown more intensity than PSG. But moments like these can change everything in football.
You expect VAR to help in big decisions like this, not to be ignored. Still, the game isnāt over. Bayern have the quality and mentality to respond in the second half. Letās wait and see what happens ā because football can always surprise you.ā
Las jugadas de la discusión. Las manos que reclamaron con todo los futbolistas del Bayern Munich. Al final, ni segunda amarilla para Nuno Mendes (el Ć”rbitro pitó algo previo), ni penal. POLĆMICA EN ALEMANIA.
Paul Thomas Anderson used his Best Picture Oscar speech to shout out a bunch of incredible movies that DIDN'T win, reminding the "losers" tonight that their films will still go down in history:
"In 1975, the Oscar nominees for Best Picture were Dog Day Afternoon, One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, Jaws, Nashville, and Barry Lyndon. There is no 'best' among them. There is just what that mood might be that day. But we're happy to be part of this: a wonderful, wonderful journey with our fellow nominees, our fellow filmmakers, and our fellow filmmakers that even weren't recognized by the Academy. There's so many great films this year."