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Su Yiming, referee of the match: Didn't see the mistake of the champion, but it was like the hand of Maradona God

Su Yiming, referee of the match: Didn't see the mistake of the champion, but it was like the hand of Maradona God

Live bar February 10 news Previously ended in the snowboard men's slope obstacle course skills final, China's Su Yiming jumped 1800 moves in the last jump, but the final score was 88.7, lower than Parot's 90.96, and finally won the silver medal.

The referee's decision also caused controversy after the game, and recently, when the referee of the game, Izzak Shumatić, in an interview with White Lines, talked about the hot incident, saying that the referee did not see the championship's mistake, when they saw it, the score had been played, but he also said that from the perspective of the replay given by the referee, the score was no problem.

Q: So under normal circumstances, if you think something is wrong, you will say "Can you see the replay", under this premise, if you are just looking at it from one point of view, because his movements look clean, so no one asks to see the replay of this action?

Schumatic: Yeah, I have to reiterate, that's the replay angle that our referee gets, whoever looks at that angle, let anybody else look at it, as long as he's honest enough, he's going to think it's a well-executed move.

Q: When did you see that picture that everybody saw on TV?

(The second angle of the replay showed a tackle error by Parrott, but by the time the referee saw this angle, the score was already played – first image)

Schumatic: (when I saw this picture) It was too late, and the score had already been scored.

Q: So what was the conversation in the referee's seat at that time?

Schumatic: Sure, people are saying, "Damn it's an angle we didn't see," but I read an article by one of your colleagues and compared this mistake to Maradona's Hand of God at the '86 World Cup in Mexico. I would say that the referee did not see this angle, but the referee made a score penalty, and after scoring the score, it could not be modified. It's the score in real time, the angle we see, and it makes perfect sense to score from that perspective.

Q: If you saw that misstep, I guess the score might be different?

Schumatich: Of course it will be different scores. But there are many influencing factors, and I can only say that for Max Parrott, he still contributed a remarkable round of performance, especially in the props section.

Schumatic eventually said that we would give the score and judge from the angle we saw, which is the real-time score, and we scored from the specific angle given by the media.

(KI)

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