Anonymous wrote:Again, most of us think this is tacky. However, it is acceptable and encouraged by Hispanics and I honestly think the rest of us need to learn to suck it up. It's a good lesson for our kids because it accurately reflects the world they live in. Yeh, no one likes 'sore winners,' but they exist and you have to deal. For chrissake, we have a classic 'sore winner' in the white house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So where is the line or tolerance for celebrations after goals? We have played 2 really good teams 2 weeks in a row and noticed both did a lot of celebration that appeared to be scripted, meaning not your normal fist pump high fives, but actual NFL level celebrations. Is this a new trend? Refs didn't seem to mind or care.
Stop them from scoring. Why would the ref care. No rule against it as long as it doesn't delay the restart or directly taunting the opponent.
Anonymous wrote:So where is the line or tolerance for celebrations after goals? We have played 2 really good teams 2 weeks in a row and noticed both did a lot of celebration that appeared to be scripted, meaning not your normal fist pump high fives, but actual NFL level celebrations. Is this a new trend? Refs didn't seem to mind or care.
Anonymous wrote:So where is the line or tolerance for celebrations after goals? We have played 2 really good teams 2 weeks in a row and noticed both did a lot of celebration that appeared to be scripted, meaning not your normal fist pump high fives, but actual NFL level celebrations. Is this a new trend? Refs didn't seem to mind or care.