Agree 4th one was so incredible. As for the 5th, I recall the kicker was actually shown a yellow card (no doubt the goal stood) for the rather obscure offence of "insulting the opponent".
The guys that did the trick kicks would have gotten their heads bashed in (I'm serious) if they did something like that playing ice hockey. You don't show up the other team like that. It's not smart tactics, it's not sportsmanlike and it's shows selfishness in a team sport.
lesselp They did entertain. Professional sports, however, is much more about winning than entertaining. If you don't believe that, and it appears you don't, then you're the idiot.
***** You've obviously never seen hockey. I grew up with both sports, and hockey is far more exciting. It's not about the limelight either because you can achieve limelight in both sports - just make beautiful goals and beautiful passes. My issue is teamwork. What those guys did was risk a team's success for individual glory. Those are unnecessary risks. I'm sure their soccer teammates weren't happy either. I know their coaches weren't.
Football is a beautiful game. As long as you win fairly what's there to argue about? All I know is that nobody discredits a chilena goal and nobody talks bad about players like Neymar, Messi, H. Sanchez, Ronaldinho, CR7 when they go fancy. Making goals is definitely function over form, but there's no need to be Spartan in a game that celebrates the ingenuity and skills of players.
We call American Football, "football" because the length of the ball is just about a foot, or around 30 cms if you use the metric system. Also, the British did coin the term soccer since Americans were already calling Football, Football. The shape of the ball and the way we play the game has no impact on the naming of the sport, also science doesn't need to explain it since its a pretty simple answer.
Thanks for that! i have been telling people this for years. Only difference is that the English coined the name "soccer" to prevent confusion with Rugby Football ("rugger"), which came into existence in England around the same time (they both branched off from the same mid-1800's rule-sets).
the word football applies to whichever form of football is the most popular in the regional context in which the word appears, including association football, as well as American football, Australian rules football, Canadian football, Gaelic football, rugby league, rugby union, and other related games. These variations of football are known as football codes.
I'm from Dublin. Try going to the rte website and you'll see that there's a soccer category for the foreign game and a football category for the national game.
The only rules regarding the penalty is that once the run up is started that the taker can't stop then continue, and the end of the penalty is when the keeper has clear control of the ball or it isn't moving or it has gone out of play. As for others touching the ball, it can only occur once the keeper has saved or it has hit the woodwork
According to the Dutch football rules Juli 2009 it sais: If a ball bounches back from the bar or post, hits the ground before the line, and then passes the line, no goal should be counted. The penalty was done on the moment the ball hit the ground before the line. Having that said, he has a point with number 4.
He's right you realise. The ball has to be continuously moving forward once it moves backwards the penalty is considered a miss. So for example when it hit the crossbar as soon as it came back out it shouldn't be considered a goal.
It depends, I don't think they do, because it seems to be a penalty shoot-out, therefore if the initial kick is saved, it is not a goal, even if the ball "rolls" into the net after the keeper has saved it.
the motive to do a salto is to hide shooting left or right footed, because the keeper has his eye on the ball and perfectly sees which side the ball goes
Millwall once had a penalty that the goalie saved, but he was in front of the line so it had to be retaken. He saved the retaken penalty too, but it had to be retaken because the goalie did the same mistake. The re-retaken penalty was scored. Hilarious, that was, that goalie had no clue!
Actually, when football was first invented, it was called "Association Football" by Englishmen. Then they themselves abbreviated the word to "soccer". Look it up if you don't believe me, but "soccer" is an English term.
There is a difference between a penalty kick and "kicks from the penalty spot". if it is the latter, the play is deemed over if the ball ceases to move forward. I think both #3 and #4 were not penalty kicks but end-of-game Kicks from the Penalty Spot. As such, neither of those should have counted.
Actually, not that it REALLY matters, but officially in Australia the name for this code is now 'Football', not 'Soccer'. Officially, the name changed 10 years ago in 2003, but not widely used until 7 years ago. As of 2006 the Australian Soccer Association renamed itself Football Federation Australia. Since then most mainstream Aussie press have finally begun adopting the term 'Football'. Not to mention that the region in which Australia plays is called the Asian Football Confederation.
Soccer is a shortening of "Association Football", taking the "soc" out of "asSOCiation" and diminutizing it (making "soc=soccer" the same way "footy=football" or "Danny="Daniel"). Actually, "football" is a type of game, rather than a single game. The term is usually used to refer to the most popular football-type game in the region (NFL in America, Australian-Rules Football down under, Rugby League or Union in some places, and Soccer in most of the rest of the world).
Okay. Go to Wikipedia's article called "History of association football". In the first section, the 7th paragraph (or 8th if you count the rules-quote to be a separate paragraph), it is explained.
I'm sorry guys, it's neither Finland nor Germany, it's Switzerland and the place is called Baar (look at the background in 0:30). There he asks 'was hetter gmacht' what's 'was hat er gemacht' in German or 'what did he do' in English.
A sport is given the term football, if it is generally the most popular sport. So in America, grid iron would be considered football. This doesn't only apply to America as well, as other countries call different sports football, such as Australians call it soccer and New Zealanders likewise (a small minority may call it football) as rugby and Aussie rules are a lot more popular than soccer in those countries.
What a load of old tosh! I've seen countless examples of the ball striking the post/bar, rebounding off of the back of the keeper and going in and they all counted.
the ball has to stop (by itself or by getting caught by the keeper) or go off the pitch. if the ball is still in motion, the penalty is not over. at least these are the rules i know.
Za ostatnie wykonanie rzutu karnego, piłkarz został ukarany. Zostało to odebrane jako nieposzanowanie przeciwnika. Nie pamiętam szczegółów, bo to już dawno było, ale można sobie doszukać w necie :)
I'm Irish and I have yet to hear anyone over here to refer to it as soccer. In fact the only time I use the term soccer is when I refer to the game Super Soccer on the SNES. Fact is, football is football, there are many different types, who really gives a shit what version it is.
English Football was first. Then American Football was invented and became popular in the US. To avoid confusion between the two, the ENGLISH NAMED THEIRS SOCCER, as an abbreviation of the sport's official name, Association Football. I am English by the way :)
"A kick is successful if, having been touched once by the kicker, it crosses the goal line without going out of play or touching any player other than the defending goalkeeper. The ball may touch the goalkeeper, posts, or crossbar any number of times before going into the net." the ball moved backward BUT never went out of play.
I'm from Ireland, and I don't know anyone who regularly calls it soccer. It's football as far as I'm concerned, not that it makes a difference. And I'm a huge GAA fan also.
The English founders of the game coined and used the term "Soccer" in order to differentiate it from an offshoot rule set that became Rugby; both were called "football" at the time. It is hardly appropriate to berate someone for calling it Soccer when the people who invented the modern version of the game, Englishmen, used that word themselves.
Agree 4th one was so incredible. As for the 5th, I recall the kicker was actually shown a yellow card (no doubt the goal stood) for the rather obscure offence of "insulting the opponent".
The guys that did the trick kicks would have gotten their heads bashed in (I'm serious) if they did something like that playing ice hockey. You don't show up the other team like that. It's not smart tactics, it's not sportsmanlike and it's shows selfishness in a team sport.
lol
Sport is about entertainment,idiot..they entertained
lesselp They did entertain. Professional sports, however, is much more about winning than entertaining. If you don't believe that, and it appears you don't, then you're the idiot.
***** You've obviously never seen hockey. I grew up with both sports, and hockey is far more exciting. It's not about the limelight either because you can achieve limelight in both sports - just make beautiful goals and beautiful passes. My issue is teamwork. What those guys did was risk a team's success for individual glory. Those are unnecessary risks. I'm sure their soccer teammates weren't happy either. I know their coaches weren't.
Football is a beautiful game. As long as you win fairly what's there to argue about? All I know is that nobody discredits a chilena goal and nobody talks bad about players like Neymar, Messi, H. Sanchez, Ronaldinho, CR7 when they go fancy.
Making goals is definitely function over form, but there's no need to be Spartan in a game that celebrates the ingenuity and skills of players.
Why Americans call Eggball football and Football soccer, its a question science cant explain
Because the British coined the word "soccer"
Jacob Maloney
nope
We call American Football, "football" because the length of the ball is just about a foot, or around 30 cms if you use the metric system. Also, the British did coin the term soccer since Americans were already calling Football, Football. The shape of the ball and the way we play the game has no impact on the naming of the sport, also science doesn't need to explain it since its a pretty simple answer.
FlyersMania28 it was a rhtoric question. i dont need explanation bcs you call something wrong.
John X Can't tell if you're a fucking idiot or a troll hahahah. Who gives a fuck?
Thanks for that! i have been telling people this for years. Only difference is that the English coined the name "soccer" to prevent confusion with Rugby Football ("rugger"), which came into existence in England around the same time (they both branched off from the same mid-1800's rule-sets).
That last piece of sublime cheek actually got the player carded for showboating, in a way the ref deemed disrespectful to the other team.
I don't think the second penalty was weird. I think it was skill and swag.
swag?
Shaheem Iqbal sweg
that's better
He shot the ball and then did a backflip, the backflip had nothing to do with the goal
still. It was cool
the 2nd one was dead funny
This is great!!!
The 1st,3rd and last ones were fucking hilarious,made my day.
the word football applies to whichever form of football is the most popular in the regional context in which the word appears, including association football, as well as American football, Australian rules football, Canadian football, Gaelic football, rugby league, rugby union, and other related games. These variations of football are known as football codes.
240p
seriously?
the last one died in a car crash
4th is dead funny OMG
1:06 how is that melody called? it is amazing for freestyle....
Outstanding video...Thanks for upload.
1:59 what a bad goalkeeper
He was bribed.
0:38 you can hear wipping in the back
wipping???
The guy (no1) from uae died after some weeks of that match :(
Yes the backheel goal ziab awana
I was a bit scared listening to that commentator at the end. xD
Thanks for uploading. It's about time we got a video like this without all that fucked music over the top.
655 goalkeepers dislike this video ..^^
Its not football
Its futbol
in english it is football
It's not futbol its fútbol
england invented FOOTBALL so it is football. i'd like to know what the hell futbol is.
yea
João Pedro Marques Grave Oliveira England actually invented "soccer" before "football", oddly enough. Look up the etymology.
I'm from Dublin. Try going to the rte website and you'll see that there's a soccer category for the foreign game and a football category for the national game.
you must have a lot of subscribers and a lot of ppl viewing your videos. The more ppl following u, the more money u make
i like the one where the gk goes out to celebrate and the guy sobs in his knees and he comes back and it trickles in
The only rules regarding the penalty is that once the run up is started that the taker can't stop then continue, and the end of the penalty is when the keeper has clear control of the ball or it isn't moving or it has gone out of play. As for others touching the ball, it can only occur once the keeper has saved or it has hit the woodwork
2:00 love listening to commentators from other countries
According to the Dutch football rules Juli 2009 it sais: If a ball bounches back from the bar or post, hits the ground before the line, and then passes the line, no goal should be counted. The penalty was done on the moment the ball hit the ground before the line.
Having that said, he has a point with number 4.
He's right you realise. The ball has to be continuously moving forward once it moves backwards the penalty is considered a miss. So for example when it hit the crossbar as soon as it came back out it shouldn't be considered a goal.
You should add the legendary penalty from Johan Cruijff and Jesper Olsen playing for Ajax(NL)
The 2nd last one oh my god!!! Brilliant!
It depends, I don't think they do, because it seems to be a penalty shoot-out, therefore if the initial kick is saved, it is not a goal, even if the ball "rolls" into the net after the keeper has saved it.
Once the kick's taken, the ball is in play. The rule might be different for spot kicks to decide games but not for penalties.
the motive to do a salto is to hide shooting left or right footed, because the keeper has his eye on the ball and perfectly sees which side the ball goes
The second to the last one had me dying!!
love how someone just yells FOOTBALL! after the 2nd guy scores
Millwall once had a penalty that the goalie saved, but he was in front of the line so it had to be retaken. He saved the retaken penalty too, but it had to be retaken because the goalie did the same mistake. The re-retaken penalty was scored. Hilarious, that was, that goalie had no clue!
the 4th one made my day
If you go in fullscreen then that's my vision when i'm drunk.
I love how the keepers who saves the penalties celebrates and are so prowd :)
lesson learned from 2 goals which rebounce & enter the goal.... "Never celebrate too early"!... very funny but a good lesson in life.
The 2nd to last was priceless!
Actually, when football was first invented, it was called "Association Football" by Englishmen. Then they themselves abbreviated the word to "soccer". Look it up if you don't believe me, but "soccer" is an English term.
In penalty shootouts once the ball seizes to move forward it is deemed dead. Happened in a World Cup game whereby it counted in error.
الله يرحمك يا ذياب عوانه :( the first player died in a car accident
third and second last ones HAHAHA unbelievable i watch football all my life never seen anything like it before incredible :D
The 4.th one is the best Ha ha ha ha ha And the(#2) guy with the summersault was great too!!!
There is another, if anyone can find it, where the spot kicker just taps the ball to one side and another player runs and scores. Perfectly legal.
There is a difference between a penalty kick and "kicks from the penalty spot". if it is the latter, the play is deemed over if the ball ceases to move forward. I think both #3 and #4 were not penalty kicks but end-of-game Kicks from the Penalty Spot. As such, neither of those should have counted.
The 3rd one, I have never laughed so hard in my life.
The team this guys from is actually just 5 mins from my home dayum i realised this after watchin this 1000times😂🔫
last one is brilliant
good video :)
I'm starting to think that there is a football vs soccer conversation under every football/soccer video
The last penalty... I don't think he will try and do that if the score is 0-0.
The best part was after the first penalty when the fan scored it he ran up to a player with a thumbs up probably saying celebrate lol
The one that hit the bar is classic.
The last one was killed in a car accident an year later, his head found in the back seat & his brother with multiple injuries.
Actually, not that it REALLY matters, but officially in Australia the name for this code is now 'Football', not 'Soccer'. Officially, the name changed 10 years ago in 2003, but not widely used until 7 years ago.
As of 2006 the Australian Soccer Association renamed itself Football Federation Australia. Since then most mainstream Aussie press have finally begun adopting the term 'Football'.
Not to mention that the region in which Australia plays is called the Asian Football Confederation.
Soccer is a shortening of "Association Football", taking the "soc" out of "asSOCiation" and diminutizing it (making "soc=soccer" the same way "footy=football" or "Danny="Daniel"). Actually, "football" is a type of game, rather than a single game. The term is usually used to refer to the most popular football-type game in the region (NFL in America, Australian-Rules Football down under, Rugby League or Union in some places, and Soccer in most of the rest of the world).
Atleast he is honest, unlike most of them.
WHAT THE FUCK HAPPENS IN THE SECOND ONE?????? JUST A GENERIC GOAL!
Okay. Go to Wikipedia's article called "History of association football". In the first section, the 7th paragraph (or 8th if you count the rules-quote to be a separate paragraph), it is explained.
das letzte war einfach nur Respekt los , da die Gegner eh schon hinten lagen
this player from United Arab Emirate and he passed away after this match in very few month his name Thyab Awane . by car accident after club
training
quality.. thanks for sharing
LOL in cartoon the goalie would have a donkey face when he realized that it was a goal. he was owned
4th one wuz hillarious
I'm sorry guys, it's neither Finland nor Germany, it's Switzerland and the place is called Baar (look at the background in 0:30). There he asks 'was hetter gmacht' what's 'was hat er gemacht' in German or 'what did he do' in English.
A sport is given the term football, if it is generally the most popular sport. So in America, grid iron would be considered football. This doesn't only apply to America as well, as other countries call different sports football, such as Australians call it soccer and New Zealanders likewise (a small minority may call it football) as rugby and Aussie rules are a lot more popular than soccer in those countries.
nice goals
The player who shot the last penalty died in a car accident 3-4 months back. He was only 21 years old.
What a load of old tosh! I've seen countless examples of the ball striking the post/bar, rebounding off of the back of the keeper and going in and they all counted.
the ball has to stop (by itself or by getting caught by the keeper) or go off the pitch. if the ball is still in motion, the penalty is not over. at least these are the rules i know.
Za ostatnie wykonanie rzutu karnego, piłkarz został ukarany. Zostało to odebrane jako nieposzanowanie przeciwnika.
Nie pamiętam szczegółów, bo to już dawno było, ale można sobie doszukać w necie :)
anyone notice how at the 3rd penalty the keeper tries showing off to an empty crowd when the ball went into the net anyways
I'm Irish and I have yet to hear anyone over here to refer to it as soccer. In fact the only time I use the term soccer is when I refer to the game Super Soccer on the SNES.
Fact is, football is football, there are many different types, who really gives a shit what version it is.
was the 4th pen giving as a goal the 1 the hit the crossbar???
The penalty shot at 00:51 was incredibly hard to see with all of those fans being a distraction in the stadium.
English Football was first. Then American Football was invented and became popular in the US. To avoid confusion between the two, the ENGLISH NAMED THEIRS SOCCER, as an abbreviation of the sport's official name, Association Football.
I am English by the way :)
nice but I missed Johan Cruyff's penalty vs Helmond Sport.
I agree with you. Table Tennis is better. They respect other players
second one the best one goal ever seen :)
the last one kicker actually got punished in term of underresting
yes. the ball didnt went over the backline before he came in the goal so its an legal goal :)
That player got bashed by his own country for not respecting the game. They had a huge lead yet, he tries to show up. He did apologize though
Just a question, are the 3rd and 4th shots considered as goals? Good if someone can answer me.:)
The last one. the player apologized to his team and opponents because he was arrogant while they embarrassing the other team
Lol. Not an American but it's a fact that English people called it soccer for a couple of years before changing it to football xD
Lol the last one, that was an easy ball to safe though...
Once the ball moves backwards the play stops so the one that hit the crossbar shouldn't count.
where is that a rule?
"The referee decides when a penalty kick has been completed."
so if he waits til he crosses the line thats his perogative, still in play, still a penalty
"A kick is successful if, having been touched once by the kicker, it crosses the goal line without going out of play or touching any player other than the defending goalkeeper. The ball may touch the goalkeeper, posts, or crossbar any number of times before going into the net."
the ball moved backward BUT never went out of play.
yeah, what he said
THE THIRD PENALTY OHMYLORD HAHAH XD
I'm from Ireland, and I don't know anyone who regularly calls it soccer. It's football as far as I'm concerned, not that it makes a difference. And I'm a huge GAA fan also.
Amazing
The last one got the player banned for a game for unsporting conduct
The English founders of the game coined and used the term "Soccer" in order to differentiate it from an offshoot rule set that became Rugby; both were called "football" at the time. It is hardly appropriate to berate someone for calling it Soccer when the people who invented the modern version of the game, Englishmen, used that word themselves.
"oh fuuuck man 7:0 für baar" ;)
greetings from switzerland :*
lmao the field crashers
That last one should've gotten a yellow for overly mocking the other team.
the second one was sick