The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Jim Spence on Saturday

It’s time that common sense prevailed

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The debate over video technology in football was reignited in midweek after a crystal clear Hibs goal against rivals Hearts was disallowed by referee Steven Mclean.

Television replays plainly showed that the whole of the ball from Oli Shaw’s shot was well over the line, yet the referee missed it and no goal was given.

Refs are human: they miss things when angles are blocked by players, they’re not up with play or the speed of a shot is so quick that the human eye can’t process the informatio­n in real time.

Costs rumoured to be around £300,000 per stadium have been mentioned as inhibiting the introducti­on of goal-line technology, but in midweek TV cameras were covering the game. It would have taken around 30 seconds for the referee to watch a trackside monitor and arrive at the correct decision.

Modern football is a business.

A disallowed goal can cost clubs a small fortune in league placing or cup success. When best evidence is available as it was with TV cameras at Tynecastle, then even if we don’t yet have fully rigged up goal-line video technology, that evidence should be used.

It’s plain common sense.

Sadly that is something which is too often lacking in Scottish football.

City’s wealth has made top flight a joke

Manchester City have made England’s top league a one-horse race, and silenced commentato­rs and pundits south of the border, who used to insult Scottish football by calling it a two-club show.

City, owned as a plaything by mega rich Sheikh Mansour of Abu Dhabi, are proof that in football money can buy success, as long as it comes in enormous quantities.

Fifteen points ahead of their second-placed rivals Manchester United, and 21 ahead of London giants Arsenal and Spurs, the money from the Middle East has turned England’s top flight into a joke competitio­n for second place.

The league, claimed by some to be the best in the world, was won before Christmas.

Even Chelsea, owned by Russian billionair­e Roman Abramovich, have had to bow the knee to new overlords as City, traditiona­lly the second team in Manchester, sweep all before them.

Having spent £400 million since taking over at the club, Pep Guardiola, has set about annihilati­ng the opposition, and reducing them to an irrelevanc­e.

Unbeaten in 20 league games, City now exist on a different planet from their rivals, who make up the rest of the bloated carcase of the Premier League: their own huge wealth now eclipsing clubs boasting historical­ly much greater achievemen­ts.

City are driven by the kind of mega-wealth which buys the quality of player capable of steamrolle­ring the opposition. The financial opulence of the Premier League has elevated many smaller clubs in England to super-rich status, but it’s built solely on foundation­s of television money.

In a fastchangi­ng world with a generation whose habits change rapidly, if that TV income dries up because the next generation stop tuning in, the English game will find that every bubble bursts eventually.

When it does, many clubs may be up to their necks in quicksand.

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 ??  ?? Pep Guardiola has spent £400 million since taking over as Manchester City boss.
Pep Guardiola has spent £400 million since taking over as Manchester City boss.
 ??  ?? Neil Lennon was fuming that the officials failed to see Oli Shaw’s effort was well over the line. Picture: SNS.
Neil Lennon was fuming that the officials failed to see Oli Shaw’s effort was well over the line. Picture: SNS.

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