@TheKevinEndres@JustCover1029 nice graphic youve got there mate, doesnt prove anything. read the rules of football. you yanks do my head in. most of those examples youve given i disagree with too, and anyone who actually watches football would agree that baloguns was a straight red card.
@BretBryce honestly, you ignorant yanks do my head in. for the last time: in this situation, baloguns intentions DON’T MATTER. it was the dangerous level of contact that deemed it a red. stop talking about reasons, the contact matters. do i need to dumb it down more?
@BretBryce its alright guys - Bret Bryce has rewritten the rules of football. everyone can stand down, he clearly knows the rulebook better than anyone.
@BretBryce i agree that should have been a red too, and you can argue that messi is treated differently. however, 1. this is a separate issue, and you claim that baloguns challenge wasnt a red card - it was. and 2, there are countless examples of those exact fouls being reds, its the rules.
@starjooonie yes it was warranted, and the commentators said that before they saw the slo-mo it might of been a yellow, but after they confirmed red. you yanks don’t understand that that level of dangerous contact almost always warrants a red card, it seriously endangered the bosnian player.
@BretBryce well thats why VAR exists. what a terrible argument, that it “looked okay on the field”. the slow-mo exposed the foul, which was clearly a very dangerous amount of contact.
@lack_41 that wasnt a terrible call. it was the right call. it doesnt matter if he meant it or not, that type of contact is dangerous and is almost always a red card.
@RealHashtagHay@NFL@JalenMilroe@FedEx he's not the best, but he's got 95.8 PFF passing grade on passes thrown 40 or more yards, which is the best in the draft class. he can use some work on shorter ones, but he can throw.