Victory through unsporting competition, he presumed, was preferable to no victory at all. |
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What unsporting behaviour from these 2 players Pargat and Baljeet, who between them have been the the past 3 Olympic hockey captains of India. |
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In a match it doesn't even enter his mind, but it's in training that mental demons indulge in unsporting behaviour. |
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Any criticism that Northern Ireland employed unsporting tactics in the game is well wide of the mark. |
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He pays me a sidewise glance, incredulous brows knitting an ambiguity, finding it almost unsporting to fold and venture a smile of concession. |
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There, in 1999 the Americans were guilty of some of the most outrageously uncouth and unsporting behaviour ever displayed in a sporting arena. |
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The type of unsporting behaviour he showed was ridiculous really but thankfully Beckham rose above it. |
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McLeish had once been similarly accused of unsporting play in a match against Argentina in 1989, he happily remembered. |
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The Polish Hockey Association secretary also came into the field and accused the Pakistanis of unsporting behaviour. |
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It appears that Croke Park wants to stamp out this unsporting behaviour that has long been part of the professional soccer game. |
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And every time the tournaments comes around, we get re-introduced to the horrible unsporting injustice of the penalty shoot-out. |
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Lots of farcical situations arise, which it would be unsporting to divulge. |
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When Celtic slammed Porto's unsporting behaviour in the UEFA Cup final, they omitted to mention that it was irrelevant to the outcome. |
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Blake seemed to make the most of it and, surprisingly, he was not even cautioned for his unsporting behaviour. |
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I took the easy way out and did the very unsporting thing of hiding my assigned fabric inside the pockets as a lining. |
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The referee may caution the team mate of the identified kicker for unsporting behaviour. |
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If the referee notices this before the match starts the offending player is cautioned for unsporting behaviour. |
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The referee stops play, cautions the goalkeeper for unsporting behaviour and play is restarted with an indirect free kick to the opposing team. |
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He stops play, cautions the player for unsporting behaviour and restarts play with an indirect free kick. |
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If he moves or gesticulates to distract the thrower, he is cautioned for unsporting behaviour. |
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It sternly discourages such innovations as electronic rangefinders mounted on conventional bows, deeming such gadgets unsporting. |
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He allows play to continue and cautions both players for unsporting behaviour when the ball goes next out of play. |
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The race will be stopped if one or more riders are at fault or behave in an unsporting manner while being placed behind the derny. |
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If a player makes unauthorised marks on the field of play with his foot, he must be cautioned for unsporting behaviour. |
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While the ball is in play, two players of the same team commit unsporting behaviour or violent conduct towards each other on the field of play. |
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The bulky center back will be remembered for all the wrong reasons with his disappointing performances and unsporting behavior. |
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He also vented his anger at their opponents for their unsporting antics during the game and yesterday he even suggested that their euphoria will now be replaced by shame. |
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He said the protest should not be perceived as the cry of bad losers but as a legitimate move to bring sanity to the game by discouraging unsporting behaviour. |
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When in 1949 a New Zealander called Brunton Smith flung himself full-length to prevent a Yorkshire boundary, the Bramall Lane crowd booed his unsporting behaviour. |
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Donie Brennan did have a chance to equalise but his effort from an acute free went wide off the far post, as the game became niggly and unsporting. |
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Opponents of the measure, Mainers for Fair Bear Hunting, called such tactics cruel and unsporting. |
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The tactic, although effective, was widely considered by Australian crowds as vicious and unsporting. |
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But his celebrations soon turned sour as the referee gave the goal, but produced a red card for unsporting conduct. |
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That is very different to having unsporting behaviour with violent conduct. |
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If, in the opinion of the referee, the player is also guilty of unsporting behaviour, by deliberately handling the ball, he is sent off for receiving a second caution in the same match. |
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If a player attempts to prevent a goal by deliberately handling the ball after a restart of play in which it is not possible to score a goal directly, he is not sent off, but is cautioned for unsporting behaviour. |
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For the Brits, coaching, even practicing, was, well, unsporting. |
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This recent episode clearly illustrates how ADG is much more effective than the penalty shootout at punishing teams who are guilty of unsporting and illegal play. |
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However, if the referee considers that he has left the field of play for tactical reasons and has gained an unfair advantage by re-entering the field of play, the player must be cautioned for unsporting behaviour. |
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Any player that tries to fool the referees by feigning injury or pretending to have suffered an offence will be guilty of simulation and will be punished for unsporting behaviour. |
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Sportsmen are ambassadors of their nations and to act in an unruly and unsporting manner is not cricket. |
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Disobeying this rule is considered unsporting behaviour and may result in up to two bases being awarded to the batting team or a batter being sent out. |
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One, it reduces the management challenge to an unsporting nonchallenge. |
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