Well, he was the one with longer arms in their team, so it makes sense that he'd be the one playing 1v2 a while.. It works like that in other sports as well.. like, defending team in hockey, if the defenseman loses/breaks a stick, the forward player gives him his for a while.... In the end they won the rally...
I was just about to ask about that play. I don't know enough about football rules but it didn't seem like a legal goal to steal the ball at that point. That's why I thought he was trying to get the crowd on his side after it.
every video i clicked for the past couple of months has an interesting title with a somewhat thumbnail that is a little bit related to the title but honestly im thinking of something else so i just clicked..
It can actually be safer because american football playwrs get overconfident with their protective gear and smash literally head first into people. Thats how you get stuff like CTE
Ronaldo has gotten called foul for that previously but in that case he tapped the ball out of the goalie's hand. This time was not a foul because the goalie has released the ball before Ronaldo went for it.
Ronaldinho didnt allow the keeper to release the ball, and dropping the ball to punt it is not considered a release. and for the second one, the PK must be taken by a clearly identified kick taker. Only that player may take the PK. In the clip the player who identifies as the kick taker then exits the area and another player takes the kick.
Wrestling, and their neck muscles are trained for years, especially to avoid a so called "loss of shoulders" by making a "bridge" where they fight against pressure of their opponent only with this part of muscles. They really have bull necks :). The most famous example is from the Olympics 1984, when Pasquale Passarelli hold such a bridge for 1:30 min...
@@florians.5100 I don't know anything about wrestling - who won that point in the last clip? (And how?) They both seemed like they were free to move the whole time? Is the referee wearing 1 blue and 1 red wristband to indicate who wins each point?
@@Roman-hg6rg blue got points like you saw from referee. But perhaps red also got, the clip is too short to see, if referee gave aditional points. It often depends on the interpretation of referee, how he is giving points. When you start an action and can turn your opponent in a way, that both his shoulders "show" to the ground, you get points. In this example, that can match to red AND blue... and yes, he wears two different coloured wristbands to show the points.