SOMETHING odd happened during the first leg of the PFF Suzuki Under-23 National Cup Finals between fierce rivals Bacolod and Iloilo, the home team.
It wasn’t the home team losing that made it odd but the game going into extra time in the first leg. Now this was unusual, if not unheard of, and got me scratching my head the whole day.
According to a report published on national broadsheet Manila Bulletin yesterday, “Negros and Iloilo battled to a 1-all tie after the regulation ended, but to the players and coaches’ surprise tournament officials ruled that a 30-minute extra time was needed.”
“Usually, an extra time is only allowed in the second leg of a home-and-away series, but Red Avelino, the overall tournament coordinator, said it was part of the technical rules,” the report said.
Sports Editor Mike Limpag and I tried to recall any tournament that employed a first-leg extra time, to no avail. And was it even allowed?
There was only one way to find out, so I checked Fifa’s Laws of the Game and found this section: “Procedures to determine the winner of a match of home-and-away.”
The section states that extra time is one of the three methods “approved for
determining the winning team where competition rules require there to be a winning team after a match has been drawn.” The other two methods are the away goals and penalty kicks.
“Competition rules may provide for two further equal periods, not exceeding 15 minutes each, to be played,” the section says of extra time.
Take note of the phrase “may provide,” which suggest using extra time is optional. The rules also didn’t explicitly state that extra time can’t be used in the first leg of a two-leg series. So to the first question, yes the alteration did not violate anything.
Since I haven’t secured a copy of the technical rules of the competition, I figured that organizers probably didn’t find the need to employ the away goals rule in the U-23 finals, as they have opted for extra time in the first leg, although nothing could have stopped them from throwing in away goals just to complicate things.
But the more I thought about it, the more I wondered why the organizers decided to depart from a format that football fans are more familiar with: a home-and-away match decided on away goals, and in case of an aggregate tie after the second leg, going to extra time, then penalty kicks.
There was one logical explanation, however, why the organizers might have conjured the first leg extra time: it was to take away the inherent advantage of the home team in the second leg. How so?
Since extra time is conventionally used in the second leg, the home team gets an undue advantage of 30 more minutes of having the crowd on their side plus many other intangibles that come with playing in home soil. The away team, on the other hand didn’t such an advantage in the first leg. (There is even a London study published in 2007 providing evidence of the second leg home advantage phenomenon.)
Anyway, to even things out, the U-23 finals organizers probably believed they have arrived at a “Solomonic” decision. But I’m just speculating, of course.
The finals, which stand at 1-3 in favor of Bacolod, will culminate with the second leg at the Panaad Stadium tomorrow, with IloIlo, which squandered its home advantage last Friday, now facing a nearly insurmountable task in hostile territory.
To be fair, the tournament matches did not disappoint, starting from the build up from the early stages leading to the “dream” finals between the country’s traditional football powerhouses.
And may I stress that discussions on extraneous aspects of the tournament, no matter how bothersome, shouldn’t distract us from a match up that has already lived up to expectations.
I figured we’ll have extra time after extra time to nitpick after the game.
(nsvillaflor@gmail.com)
Published in the Sun.Star Cebu newspaper on May 21, 2011.
I don't care on who wins in the final, so long as the PFF give this lads the break they deserve as part of the U23 training pool.
ReplyDeleteHowever, according to my source present during the match, it seems that no PFF official coming from U23 department was overseeing the 1st leg match. Maybe they will be present in the last leg, or opt to choose the selection of the champion team, BUT how about the outstanding players in the exciting QF and SF of the other regions? For sure they missed some promising talent.
According to him, even some officials across the PHL archipelago were puzzled to the added extra-time and much to the amazement of the coaching staff of both teams during the game. Even the match officials were not sure of what they're doing. Maybe the PFF were a little bit rusty in organizing this matches.
Unfortunately, the U-23 will serve as the "trial-test"/"break-in" on the part of the PFF in organizing other matches to come such as the Smart Club Championship as well as the Suzuki U-19 Championship. Hope that PFF will learn from experience a lesson or two in this.
Question: If you're an official of the game, will you ask the coaching staff of both teams if it's "ok" with them to play the added extra-time? Is that how a supposed official runs the show? Passing the blame if indeed a blame-game protest would arise(Hugas kamay)? This is a big blunder in the history of Philippine Football, the PFF ought to resolve.
ReplyDeletethe first leg was still under official protest and yet to be resolved, team iloilo was informed yesterday that a decision will be made by saturday pm.
ReplyDeletemany wondered why pff coordinator avelino and match commissioner butod insisted on playing extra time when some IFA officials told them twas a mistake. these just shows that some pff officials rise to prominent positions despite their LOW FOOTBALL IQ. now, how can they uncomplicate the chaos theyve created.
tournament comittee head dofitas was not at cpu but he is responsible for the asses of these two imbeciles. someone has to take responsibility and someone has to have their sorry behind whacked!!
only in the Philippines..amen..I was so shocked with the extra time in the 1st game of a home and away series..even the officials were shocked when a member of NOFA informed them that there should be an extra time as the rule states..thats the time they started reading the rules..even mr butavara of IFA was taken aghast..havent they read the rules before starting the tournament and questiion it if there are provisions that is not appropriate..remember the game ended at 1 all in regulation time..after the extra time its 3-1 for NOFA and a mountain to climb for IFA..also the redcards of Munoz and Bayking happened during the extra period..see what a stupid rule can do?..only in the Philippines..
ReplyDeleteThose imbeciles are incapable of ad libbing in a logical manner. What happened in game 1 is mind-boggling.
ReplyDeleteSo it was a member of NOFA who informed the officials that there should be extra time. Of course NOFA would try to do that, it had the advantage in that game even if it was played in Iloilo's home field. Remember that Iloilo was playing with a depleted line-up due to injuries, suspensions and protests. In the absence of its key players, Iloilo was playing to minimize goal differential, and just go all-out at the winner-take-all game in Bacolod when its key players are back. A draw was tantamount to a huge win and that's exactly how I felt at the end of regulation.
in short - 'BOBO' c Red Avelino!!! puro lang yabang wala namang alam!! bading naman yan!! ba't nga ba nasa PFF yan? dahil ba sya nagdesign ng PFF bldg? panget naman un! ano yan utang na loob?? dapat tinatanggal na yan sa PFF!! nakakasira lang ang mga ganyang tao sa football. Calling PFF President please alisin mo na yan sa PFF, puro hangin na ang mga tao jan e, dagdagan pa ni Charlie Cojuangco. Wew! Masisira ang PFF nyan!
ReplyDeletePFF nullified the extra periods. Hurrah!!! It's only fair.
ReplyDelete