@joflag@saltcod1@Steve__Paxton He didn't see it, no footage has been released showing it, and the sensor also concludes that it didn't happen. So it didn't hit a wire.
@KP07_@Barry_Baguette@Rory_Talks_Ball To try to disallow a goal in a quarterfinal? Hell fucking yes. You're retarded if you think a team won't try to find any excuse to benefit themselves.
@NottaBawt69@defaultuser9999@Freakofnaytur@MiikaArponen The whole thing is a rendering issue, just watch the "bumps" as it goes up (between 0:05 and 0:06) just before the actual thing ppl are talking about. This isn't a 1 to 1 representation.
@MiikaArponen Bro did you even watch this clip? There were 3 subtle bumps on the way up which leads me to believe that the tracking just isn't an accurate 1 to 1 representation. A ball does not move like that.
@yauert_@theoldzealand Zealand propagated that too by claiming that the ball hit a cable when the overwhelming evidence says otherwise. And then doubled down when FIFA released the sensor data by harkening back to the Croatia disallowed goal which was also correctly called.
@theoldzealand The other angles of that Croatia disallowed goal that they showed after the game made it clear that the ball changed direction. Regardless of the sensor they made the right call on that one.