Monday, July 5, 2010

Why Soccer Still Sucks



Four years after writing about the issues I have with soccer, I have to say I've enjoyed watching the latest World Cup, and my interest in the game—with its finesse, chess-match strategy, and surprising level of physicality—has increased.

But the more I try to appreciate the sport, the more it frustrates me. Soccer's still got some issues to work out, particularly with unfairness...

#1: Ghana's a Goner

The latest exhibit: Ghana falling in penalty kicks to Uruguay on Friday. I really have a problem with the intentional handball by defender Luis Suarez to prevent Uruguay’s instant death in the final minutes of extra time.

Would I have a problem if Ghana forward Asamoah Gyan had converted on the ensuing penalty shot to clinch the contest (which he should have)? Not with the outcome, no.

Do I blame Suarez for reacting in a manner that would deny a game-winning goal? Not at all. It was a natural act of last resort and self-preservation.

The problem I have is with the rulebook, namely the black-and-white nature of the handball infraction. There's a big difference between an unintentional handball at midfield and a deliberate handball at the goal line to prevent the ball from going into the net. The fact that the handball rule does not distinguish between these two situations that carry very different implications is a serious flaw, because it allows for cheating.

And that's what happened Friday—Uruguay cheated. Okay, technically they didn't "cheat" within the laws of the game, but it was cheating at its core. From a legal perspective, you could say the handball was a smart move because it was the only option to stay alive. But if the rule was truly fair, this option shouldn't have existed at all—the goal should have been awarded instantly on account of goaltending (one thing basketball does get right). I'm astonished by the lack of challenge and outrage with this rule, especially from Ghana. But writer John Leicester is with me:
"Suarez knew what he was doing. He took a calculated risk... He knew that the punishment for handling would be a penalty for Ghana. But that had to be better for Uruguay than losing to a last-gasp goal."
In a small measure of consolation, Suarez will sit out the semifinal match against the Netherlands, but will return for the finals if Uruguay advances. FIFA found Suarez guilty of "denying the opposite team a clear goal-scoring opportunity."

That's a nice way of putting it.

In a just world, the Ghanaians would be the ones preparing for the Netherlands on Tuesday. It didn't matter what happened on their penalty shot—the game should have already been over.

For more evidence that the handball rule enables cheating, look no further than Suarez himself, who instantly celebrated from the sidelines when Gyan booted his penalty shot off the crossbar. Much worse, he openly expressed zero contrition with his decision, claiming the punishment of being ejected from a World Cup game is "complicated."

"The way in which I was sent off—truth is, it was worth it," he said. "I think I made the best save of the World Cup."

#2: No Instant Replay

The USA, England, Mexico, and Portugal were all victims of poor officiating. If there was instant replay, who would be playing Tuesday and Wednesday? The 2014 World Cup has to get the officiating system right. With the level of international outrage that only soccer can present, I'm hopeful.

#3: Low Scoring

Out of all the games I've watched this World Cup, the one thing that continually irks me is the lack of scoring opportunities. This is the biggest thing holding the sport back; the main reason why most of us play soccer when we're young but only catch it once every four years.

It's an accepted truth that you tend to like things you grew up with, the only things you knew. Thus, many non-American "football" fans have no problem with low-scoring matches because they didn't grow up with the NFL, NBA, or NHL, where scoring is frequent and gratification instant. The disparity in the popularity of the game outside the United States can be explained by cultural expectations.

But as I've watched these matches, I've thought about ways to balance the sport and improve the game so that it's less restrictive and more interesting to watch. Here are a few suggestions that will never be adopted, but whose implications are interesting nonetheless:
  1. No offsides
  2. . Is there any justification to leave offsides in the game other than the fact that it's always been there? Like hockey's riddance of the two-line pass, eliminating offsides would be the easiest way to improve the game without fundamentally changing it. As in hockey, forwards would actually be rewarded for slipping behind their defenders. Scoring opportunities would increase, saves would be made, and overall interest would heighten. Offsides could even be redefined to be when a player advances into the penalty area before the ball has entered it (again, similar to hockey, the sport it most resembles).

  3. Fewer players
  4. . Reducing each side from 10 players to eight would be a pretty radical change, but I can't help but get excited about the passing and shooting lanes that would open up, and the faster pace of the game overall. One of the main reasons shots are so low in soccer is simply because there are too many players that clog up the area in front of the goal.

  5. Penalty-kick distance
  6. . Everyone knows that relying on penalty kicks has never been a great way to determine the winner of a match. So why not keep the kicks but move the shot placement back to the top of the penalty area? You know, to give goalies a higher probability of stopping the shots than Stevie Wonder.

    And while we're speaking of overtime, why is there no sudden death in the extra-time period (the opposite problem the NFL has)? Isn't the point of overtime to fairly determine a victor in a timely fashion?

    Here's what it's like in the current system: Two teams battle to a tie over the course of 90-plus minutes. One scores a huge go-ahead goal in the extra session, but not so fast—the game isn't over. They've got to continue on in the hopes of not allowing their opponent to tie the score again for the remainder of the 30 minutes. Apparently, people love seeing penalty kicks.
If you're a purist against these rules, consider these stats through July 1st from novelist Richard Greener:
  • The Group winners in the 2010 World Cup (Uruguay, Argentina, United States, Germany, Netherlands, Paraguay, Brazil and Spain) averaged 656 touches per game, with only 6.3 shots on goal in a 90-minute contest.
  • Argentina, the most aggressive offensive team, attempted a shot on goal 1.28% of the time it touched the ball. They've averaged 2.3 goals per game.
  • The worst teams, Honduras and New Zealand, averaged only 1 shot on goal per game. Honduras played their entire schedule of games without making a single goal.

In the absence of alterations to the game, I have to agree with Greener's prediction that American interest in soccer will remain largely unchanged in the years to come, unfortunately:
"Here, unlike other places, we look for sustained action and the ever-present opportunity to put points on the board. Finding neither in soccer, interest in the United States will remain limited to events like the World Cup, with fan interest created by the marketing of false patriotism for a few weeks every four years."

Guess I'm not alone after all: Why Soccer Sucks: The Antidote To World Cup Idiocy.

5 comments:

holtzab said...

I'll address some of this.

1. I believe the rules do specify a difference between an accidental handball at midfield vs an intentional handball in the box. At midfield it is a free kick. Intentional handball in the box is an automatic red card (ejection, team plays a man down, out for the next game) and a penalty kick. In the situation where a goal is clearly denied, maybe there should be an automatic goal (like in hockey). But a distinction is made between an intentional and unintentional handball.

2. Some sort of instant replay should be implemented. I'm not sure what it should be, but in a game where every goal is so important, you can't have a ball two feet inside the goal without it being a score.

3. I think the scoring is fine and can be part of the allure of soccer. I read an article where each goal was described as a "minor miracle." I, personally, don't need more goals. I like each goal being so exciting, and each chance being so meaningful. Adjusting the rules to open up the scoring means changing the game to please the few, while the majority are fine with it how it is.

4. Soccer will be given a small boost by the World Cup. I look at it like March Madness. Everybody, no matter what their interest in basketball, fills out a bracket, but how many tune in the next year for a mid-season WAC game? Not many.

But a small boost is good enough. MLS average attendance is 16,442 so far this year. The NHL was 17,072 last year. The NBA was 17,149. The numbers for the MLS are a little skewed by the fact that Seattle averages over 36,000 per game. It also lags behind in television ratings and contracts. But it is a well-run league that has expanded smartly.

So the question for you is, what does it mean to say soccer has caught on in America? When will soccer have "made it?" Bigger attendance that NBA? NHL? I would not be surprised if that happened within the next five years.

Ken said...

Thanks for your insight and comments. I do see the flip side to the lack of scoring, which is the allure you mention. I guess I like the concept of the "minor miracles" more than I do actually waiting for them to happen. If this is something unique that makes people love soccer, that's fine. I just know for me and a lot of Americans, we'd be more inclined to watch if there were more exciting plays to watch instead of the constant back and forth. That was the majority I was speaking of.

Following the US team didn't just remind me of March Madness, but also of Olympic hockey a few months ago. It was great while it lasted. A shame that they couldn't have pulled out the Ghana game.

Those are interesting numbers about MLS attendance—much higher than I'd imagined, and almost on par with the NBA and NHL. I'd also be curious to see the scoring figures with shots/goals/saves amongst the different leagues in the world.

When will soccer have made it? That's a good question. The hard number would be attendance figures. The soft one would be more of a sense of how much hype the sport generates with a championship game. Unfortunately, something tells me that'll never happen.

Anonymous said...

soccer is a disgraceful sport, players diving, faking injury, acting, cheating,stalling for time just disgusting.

that is why soccer is so dead in America, get this crap off the air. Can't wait for the real football season in the fall. Go Washington Redskins

holtzab said...

Hey Anonymous, what do the Washington Redskins have to do with real football? Ha!

holtzab said...

That is one good point you left out Ken - diving.

I don't think you can say that [insert soccer peeve here; diving, low scoring, ties] is the one thing that is keeping soccer from catching on even more in America (though it is growing). But the diving has to be fixed. It is universally despised. It's unsportsmanlike. It wastes time. It's the worst part of the game.

I want FIFA to take a more aggressive stance against it. I know refs can, and have, called penalties for diving, but it happens infrequently, just like in the NHL. What I'd like to see is an automatic review of every game so that acting jobs like the one Kader Keita pulled off that got Kaka a red card could be fixed. The NFL can issue fines and suspensions against players for infractions even if the refs missed it during the game. FIFA should aggressively suspend players for such obvious dives. I think you'd see a different game if players knew someone was going to review the video of what they were doing - even if the ref misses it, they could still get slapped for a suspension.

One other rule that I do think should be changed is substitutions in injury time. It's a time waster, pure and simple. You have 45 minutes to get the right players in there. Injury time should be for playing, not delaying.