James Richardson
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Appearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Jeff says, can you dedicate some time to helping me understand why this happens today?
Well, this is what Jeff's saying.
Why?
He says players have spent 90 minutes doing their best to win a game while a bloke in a suit
...has stood observing it all... ...why is he the one... ...that we get to see at the end... ...why don't you see... ...so... ...today for example... ...Germany against Ivory Coast... ...all sorts of drama in there... ...Undaff with that dramatic... ...94th minute... ...sorry about the helicopter... ...94th minute...
Winner.
Who does the camera go to?
Nagelsmann.
And it stays with Nagelsmann for 24 seconds, which, given that it's Nagelsmann, is a long 24 seconds.
Why does it happen?
I don't know.
My guess...
My guess was that after 94 minutes of cutting around all over the place, the director likes to go to a safe shot at the end of the game, so you know where the manager's going to be, players not so much, go to the manager, there'll be the handshake.
Maybe there won't be a handshake, and then that's the story.
Tom, you've got a different opinion.
Right.
Darren Fletcher, for example, now, and I don't think he did this before, but he now always stops after the goal has been scored until the replay starts, which I think is textbook commentary 101.
And I'm really glad it's happening.
If that's FIFA or if that's the channel that we're watching saying, let it breathe, let the moment breathe for itself instead of... Because typically, when you're watching in England, I mean, Premier League or whatever, that's the moment that they get the line out.
And whatever...