Carlos Tevez is a big fan of the snood
Another idea mooted is adding extra officials to assist the referee on making the right calls on the snood. Gok Wan is apparently very keen to get behind the goal, spotting any off-the-ball crimes against fashion. Trinny and Susannah were unavailable for comment.
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It’s thought that Fifa may invite fashion firms to tender ideas that would make the snood workable. They would obviously need to be tested. Perhaps the Europa League would be a good platform, where Emmanuel Adebayor and others could test out the neck-warming abilities and the overall aesthetics of the snood. Obviously,
cheap pandora necklaces, the referee would need to know in seconds if the snood was eligible, for fear of slowing the game down.
It’s the great debate that’s been dogging Fifa for the past few years, the issue at the forefront of football and one that can’t be ignored any longer.
It’s impossible to tell at this stage which way the debate will go. Michel Platini is apparently for the snood, believing any new rules will only harm the fabric of the beautiful game. Yet some feel there have been too many high profile snood wearing incidents to ignore it any longer. “They’ve all gone soft. I don’t know how they do it and focus on the game, it’s weird. That’s the way the game’s gone,” fumed Roy Keane.
We will have to wait for Fifa’s meeting on March 5 before the future of the snood is known. For now, we can look to Rio Ferdinand, that great commentator on the important issues of the day: “You won’t see a Man Utd player wearing a snood.” he Tweeted.
The World Cup was ruined by it and had the technology been around at the 1966 World Cup,
Bucket. Check. Spade. Check. Back in two weeks. John Rentoul Independent Eagle Eye Blogs, history would have looked very different. Yes. It’s the snood.
Fifa have put the wearing of the neck-warmer, championed by the likes of Carlos Tevez and Dani Alves, up for discussion at a meeting of the game’s law-making body.