'Never trust a man that wears a belt and suspenders at the same time. You can never trust a man that doesn't trust his own pants.' Once Upon a Time in the West
Agreed. VAR has been a clown show for years. But these ‘impact’ stats are mostly crystal ball nonsense; there’s no reliable way to replay matches without the interventions, just a lot of convenient what-ifs. Every club gets screwed sometimes. Fair to call out the dodgy calls, but this stat doesn’t prove the conspiracy that Arsenal somehow benefited more than anyone else.
@Gamanshiyou@Mo_Arsenal9 wtf does the first statement even mean, are they boulders down a hill?
We are exactly talking about this particular moment in the final, so again, what are you talking about?
I don’t know what any of those words mean.
That first sentence made zero sense, but:
1) can’t use my brain, I’m what experts would call ‘an idiot’
2) even if by some act of god Martinelli could play that pass to Gyökeres, space-time exists and by the time a pass requiring the correct angle and weight arrives at Gyökeres, the PSG defenders would have been more than enough time to recover.
3) my point stands, great run by Gyökeres, Martinelli needed to dribble the ball to allow Gyökeres to draw defenders away from the space of Dec’s run.
4) I promise you that I have both played and coached at a higher level than you.
5) #1 is still true.
Incredible ability to beat defenders. Absolutely zero end product. Doesn’t know whether to pass or shoot, and usually makes the wrong decision or has poor execution. Enough there to give him 1 more season, but if he doesn’t light it up in cup comps and sub appearances, probably needs to go.
Gyökeres’ 34.60 km/h sits below even several of the club-specific fastest players listed (and Arsenal’s top speed is already accounted for by Martinelli). Speed data comes from official tracking tech (e.g., Opta/Stats Perform or STATSports GPS), which measures peak sprint velocity in matches—note that these are instantaneous peaks, not averages, and can vary by position, game situation, and opposition.
Gyökeres’ 34.60 km/h sits below even several of the club-specific fastest players listed (and Arsenal’s top speed is already accounted for by Martinelli). Speed data comes from official tracking tech (e.g., Opta/Stats Perform or STATSports GPS), which measures peak sprint velocity in matches—note that these are instantaneous peaks, not averages, and can vary by position, game situation, and opposition.
Gyökeres’ 34.60 km/h sits below even several of the club-specific fastest players listed (and Arsenal’s top speed is already accounted for by Martinelli). Speed data comes from official tracking tech (e.g., Opta/Stats Perform or STATSports GPS), which measures peak sprint velocity in matches—note that these are instantaneous peaks, not averages, and can vary by position, game situation, and opposition.
Gyökeres’ 34.60 km/h sits below even several of the club-specific fastest players listed (and Arsenal’s top speed is already accounted for by Martinelli). Speed data comes from official tracking tech (e.g., Opta/Stats Perform or STATSports GPS), which measures peak sprint velocity in matches—note that these are instantaneous peaks, not averages, and can vary by position, game situation, and opposition.
Gyökeres’ 34.60 km/h sits below even several of the club-specific fastest players listed (and Arsenal’s top speed is already accounted for by Martinelli). Speed data comes from official tracking tech (e.g., Opta/Stats Perform or STATSports GPS), which measures peak sprint velocity in matches—note that these are instantaneous peaks, not averages, and can vary by position, game situation, and opposition.
Gyökeres’ 34.60 km/h sits below even several of the club-specific fastest players listed (and Arsenal’s top speed is already accounted for by Martinelli). Speed data comes from official tracking tech (e.g., Opta/Stats Perform or STATSports GPS), which measures peak sprint velocity in matches—note that these are instantaneous peaks, not averages, and can vary by position, game situation, and opposition.
Look at this challenge from any angle. Mendes comes across Madueke's body and brings him down.
Clear penalty for Arsenal but Daniel Siebert decides against giving it.