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O-Posts

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Is diving cheating?

Sunday, February 5, 2012

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The "art" has existed in football for decades, and is to this day, slated by many. It divides opinions in football like marmite, with indeed the vast majority choosing to hate, rather than love it. I for one love it. That "art" is diving. The act of falling on the floor under little, if indeed any contact at all. It gets labelled cheating, and I can see were people are coming from with that. But for me it's a harsh label. For me, it is intelligence. 


How can gaining an advantage for your team, with a moment of skill, not be intelligent? And yes, skill. Anyone who thinks otherwise, try it. The next time you're on a football pitch, run past an opponent and fall over. You'll either get laughed at, shouted at or booked. But those who have already mastered it, they will gain a penalty or a free kick and I respect that.


Every fan, or in fact player out there has seen their team concede a penalty off the back of a dive. Then of course, World War 3 commences. That is because you feel cheated or robbed and the referee has been conned into giving the diver's team a free strike from 12 yards out. Ironically, if it is for your side, everybody is all smiles.  I myself, have dived, won penalties and countless free kicks through diving. I've seen my team mates win penalties and free kicks through diving. I've then patted them on the back and said well done. I have also been on the receiving end of a dive. I've seen my team concede penalties through dives. And after each and every one of them, I have patted that opponent on the back and said well done.  Strange? No, not at all.




Through every single level of football, there is that instance, that moment of genius where someone has struck a ball in the top corner from 35 yards, or that outstanding individual or team effort, where you have to stand back, hold your hands up, give credit where it's due and say there is nothing we could've done about that. Similarly with the dive. There is nothing you can do. Yes, you feel hard done by, you may well have defended extremely well up until that point. That point when that flailing leg is there, there to be fell over.


That of course is when that wayward leg is there to be hit. But that leg isn't always there. There is that dive were no leg is there, and the player goes down. The "professional" diver has a grasp of where the referee is, gets on the blind side and then collapses on the floor. That shows brains, awareness, common sense and skill. That is why it shouldn't be lambasted in the manor that it is. For me, it's as much a skill as a pass or a tackle, not as commonly used obviously, but when it is used, and used correctly, it is a moment of class. 



The most common dive is of course in the penalty area when a challenge is committed.  If you can get a shot away, then hit it, if not and the odds are stacked against you, await that challenge and go down. Why not? You're not confident that you can get a shot on target, so give yourself a better chance from the penalty spot.  


Players, regularly say, "I felt contact", or "I played for the penalty". They see that keeper rushing out, then wait to play their final touch past the keeper and go over, under his challenge. That is not so much diving because you have played for the contact, but you similarly gain the advantage you're after.


There are many situations where players choose to dive. You push the ball past the player but aren't going to get there, so hold back like your being pulled. You're surrounded by two or three players, await a little shove and go down. The best, and most clever dive for me, is when you have your back to their goal, going absolutely nowhere, maybe even on your own goal line, get that little shove and the rest is history. That is a common play in football. But the response from all fans, is "why foul there?" Instead, choosing not to pick up on the dive, or the playing on contact. 



So while you are correct in saying "why foul there", understand that in that split second, while being under pressure defending near the corner flag, the guy on the floor has gone over easily; he's dived. But because it's in an area of no danger, where you can get eleven men behind the ball, the dive isn't scrutinised. Yet if that dive is in the penalty area and it's then him against the goalkeeper, he is chastised.  It only seems to be while the beneficiary is then on the offensive, in a dangerous position, he is labelled a cheat.


Looking at the label cheat, let's look at another aspect of the game. Another common event in football is the tug on the shirt, or the trip on the halfway line, which inevitably leads to a booking. What is the response to this act from every single fan and commentator watching? "You'll take a booking there" or "that's a good foul".  


Now can anyone at all explain how that is any different to a dive?No, because it isn't. I agree with the action, and indeed have taken such bookings, but you are identically seeking to gain an advantage for your team, this time defensively. Yet it appears this foul, this "cheat" is publicly tolerated in the game and never referred to as cheating.  Now, I'm not saying it should be because it is again down to using your brain and putting your team in a better position than having a striker bearing down on your penalty area, but it puzzles me as to why it is looked upon differently to the dive.




I for one, have always admired the dive greatly, and respected the skill greatly. I will continue to dive, I'll continue to smile at my opponent when they get a free kick against me through a dive. I'll not rant and rave when my team concede a penalty through a dive. I always have and always will respect it as intelligent football. I hope any readers do too. If not and your shaking your head in disbelief at my views, the next time your defender chops someone down on the halfway line and takes a booking for the team, I want you to be thinking "cheat". As the action is identical, and in my eyes, are both beneficial, advantageous, clever and not cheating. 


Written by Michael Collins
Follow him on Twitter @RudeDog86


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Posted by oalmasri at 3:01 PM    

Labels: cheating, controversy, diving, football, o-posts, Opinion, soccer, view

1 comments:

dave said...

This is why many people view this as a sport for pussies, because people support diving as a part of the game and not cheating. Diving is ruining football and is clearly cheating. The fact that people now see it as a skill is very sad and in a way depressing. Not everyone is all smiles when one of their players dives. I've confronted players on my team who have dived and have told them to not dive again. As for players that dive against me, i make sure they really feel the full force of a tackle the next time the recieve the ball. When i think of diving as cheating i always think of matches like the Australia vs Italy game in the 2006 world cup. Was Australia not cheated out of possibly advancing further than they ever have in their history? I believe they were. Diving is not beautiful, it is not elegant, it is disgracful and ridiculous. Players just look like idiots. This is the beautiful game, lets try and keep it that way

March 13, 2012 7:12 PM  

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