I had a small wager on Holland and feeling quite smug now ... but plenty time to go.
I'm interested in the debate about how the (English) referee was the first to finally be brave enough to penalise the blatant holding in the penalty box. This is an afront to the game and denies spectators goal mouth excitement ... goals, saves, hitting woodwork, everything that makes this the "beautiful game". For too long we have been treated to refs holding up the game to tell players to stop holding jerseys then resuming play and promptly allowing rugby style tackles to the ground.
I'm a retired top grade referee and this practice was just beginning to be a cancer in the game when I retired. It was about then that FIFA recognised it and said they would stamp it out. That was about 5 or 6 years ago. Players and managers are so used to the practice that it surprised them when Austria were awarded that penalty late in the game against Poland even though it was in the "stonewall" category. Even the Polish manager compounded it by saying this is practiced in every game ... I would agree ... and it is a foul ... as it would be if it were in the middle of the park. This is the strangest part of it that it is accepted behaviour and that players don't expect referees to penalise them. Here's hoping that FIFA really support the referees in stamping this out and not just give it lip service. Referees must be fearless and have the bottle to award penalties for these fouls ... it just isn't football.
Remove fear ... one of Deming's 14.