• Did I miss something, Livescore? Benfica and Atletico on AGG?

    From juanva...@gmail.com@24:150/2 to rec.sport.soccer on Tue Mar 15 22:11:42 2022

    I thought AGG meant Aggregate, which stands for the situation when a team advances on equal points but with a better goal aggregate or goal difference, as Real Madrid did last week. Level on points, better goal difference.

    But have a look at this:

    https://jmp.sh/fG3t1KZ

    That is not the case with Ajax-Benfica nor MUFC-Atletico Madrid.

    In both cases the qualified teams advanced on POINTS.

    Benfica 2 - Ajax 2; Ajax 0 - Benfica 1
    Benfica 4 points; Ajax 1 point

    Atletico Madrid 2 - MUFC 2; MUFC 0 - Atletico Madrid 1
    Atletico Madrid 4 points; MUFC 1 point.

    Is the clumsy intern to blame again?
    --- SBBSecho 3.06-Win32
    * Origin: SportNet Gateway Site (24:150/2)
  • From Ion Saliu@24:150/2 to rec.sport.soccer on Wed Mar 16 03:50:45 2022
    On Wednesday, March 16, 2022 at 7:11:43 AM UTC+2, juanva...@gmail.com wrote:
    I thought AGG meant Aggregate, which stands for the situation when a team advances on equal points but with a better goal aggregate or goal difference, as Real Madrid did last week. Level on points, better goal difference.

    But have a look at this:

    https://jmp.sh/fG3t1KZ

    That is not the case with Ajax-Benfica nor MUFC-Atletico Madrid.

    In both cases the qualified teams advanced on POINTS.

    Benfica 2 - Ajax 2; Ajax 0 - Benfica 1
    Benfica 4 points; Ajax 1 point

    Atletico Madrid 2 - MUFC 2; MUFC 0 - Atletico Madrid 1
    Atletico Madrid 4 points; MUFC 1 point.

    Is the clumsy intern to blame again?
    Don Juan:
    Glad yourCOre back, axiom|itico! Hope you wasnrCOt under arrest or somethinrCO...God forbid!
    Now, rCyaggregaterCO means just that, like rCycumulativerCO. UEFA dropped the decades-old rule that counted as double the away goals in case of a two-leg tie.
    By the old rule, you was correct in counting as rCL4rCY the 2 goals scored by Ajax in Lisbon (rCLawayrCY). rCL2rCY is, again, equal to rCL2rCY. So, the rule as you knew it no longer applies. Had Ajax rCo Benfica ended 0 rCo 0, a 30-minute overtime would have followed. The aggregate score would have been 2 rCo 2, not 4 rCo 2, hence the overtime.
    It didnrCOt matter anyway. Both Benfica and Atletico won 1 rCo 0 and qualified without any other criterIon.
    Ion (like Juan)
    --- SBBSecho 3.06-Win32
    * Origin: SportNet Gateway Site (24:150/2)
  • From juanva...@gmail.com@24:150/2 to rec.sport.soccer on Wed Mar 16 05:51:47 2022
    On Wednesday, 16 March 2022 at 12:50:47 UTC+2, ions...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Wednesday, March 16, 2022 at 7:11:43 AM UTC+2, juanva...@gmail.com wrote:
    I thought AGG meant Aggregate, which stands for the situation when a team advances on equal points but with a better goal aggregate or goal difference, as Real Madrid did last week. Level on points, better goal difference.

    But have a look at this:

    https://jmp.sh/fG3t1KZ

    That is not the case with Ajax-Benfica nor MUFC-Atletico Madrid.

    In both cases the qualified teams advanced on POINTS.

    Benfica 2 - Ajax 2; Ajax 0 - Benfica 1
    Benfica 4 points; Ajax 1 point

    Atletico Madrid 2 - MUFC 2; MUFC 0 - Atletico Madrid 1
    Atletico Madrid 4 points; MUFC 1 point.

    Is the clumsy intern to blame again?
    Don Juan:

    Glad yourCOre back, axiom|itico! Hope you wasnrCOt under arrest or somethinrCO...God forbid!

    Now, rCyaggregaterCO means just that, like rCycumulativerCO. UEFA dropped the decades-old rule that counted as double the away goals in case of a two-leg tie.

    By the old rule, you was correct in counting as rCL4rCY the 2 goals scored by Ajax in Lisbon (rCLawayrCY). rCL2rCY is, again, equal to rCL2rCY. So, the rule as you knew it no longer applies. Had Ajax rCo Benfica ended 0 rCo 0, a 30-minute overtime would have followed. The aggregate score would have been 2 rCo 2, not 4 rCo 2, hence the overtime.

    It didnrCOt matter anyway. Both Benfica and Atletico won 1 rCo 0 and qualified without any other criterIon.

    Thanks, Ion.
    Yes. I'm aware that UEFA or FIFA dropped the away goal rule, what I mean is that in the two legged match Benfica and Atletico won 1 game (3 points) and draw one (1 point) for a total of 4 points, whereas Ajax and MUFC only got 1 point each for a draw each. Nothing to do with sum or Aggregate goals in the two games.
    In the Real Madrid - PSG match they got 3 point each, but RM got 3 goals and PSG 2, which can count as RM advancing on Aggregate or sum of goals.
    The intern could say that he believed Aggregate was referred to the sum of points.
    But, I rest my case on the clumsy intern. :-DDD
    --- SBBSecho 3.06-Win32
    * Origin: SportNet Gateway Site (24:150/2)
  • From Jesus Petry@24:150/2 to rec.sport.soccer on Wed Mar 16 07:33:23 2022
    Em quarta-feira, 16 de mar|oo de 2022 |as 09:51:49 UTC-3, juanva...@gmail.com escreveu:
    On Wednesday, 16 March 2022 at 12:50:47 UTC+2, ions...@gmail.com wrote:
    On Wednesday, March 16, 2022 at 7:11:43 AM UTC+2, juanva...@gmail.com wrote:
    I thought AGG meant Aggregate, which stands for the situation when a team advances on equal points but with a better goal aggregate or goal difference, as Real Madrid did last week. Level on points, better goal difference.

    But have a look at this:

    https://jmp.sh/fG3t1KZ

    That is not the case with Ajax-Benfica nor MUFC-Atletico Madrid.

    In both cases the qualified teams advanced on POINTS.

    Benfica 2 - Ajax 2; Ajax 0 - Benfica 1
    Benfica 4 points; Ajax 1 point

    Atletico Madrid 2 - MUFC 2; MUFC 0 - Atletico Madrid 1
    Atletico Madrid 4 points; MUFC 1 point.

    Is the clumsy intern to blame again?
    Don Juan:

    Glad yourCOre back, axiom|itico! Hope you wasnrCOt under arrest or somethinrCO...God forbid!

    Now, rCyaggregaterCO means just that, like rCycumulativerCO. UEFA dropped the decades-old rule that counted as double the away goals in case of a two-leg tie.

    By the old rule, you was correct in counting as rCL4rCY the 2 goals scored by Ajax in Lisbon (rCLawayrCY). rCL2rCY is, again, equal to rCL2rCY. So, the rule as you knew it no longer applies. Had Ajax rCo Benfica ended 0 rCo 0, a 30-minute overtime would have followed. The aggregate score would have been 2 rCo 2, not 4 rCo 2, hence the overtime.

    It didnrCOt matter anyway. Both Benfica and Atletico won 1 rCo 0 and qualified without any other criterIon.

    Thanks, Ion.

    Yes. I'm aware that UEFA or FIFA dropped the away goal rule, what I mean is that in the two legged match Benfica and Atletico won 1 game (3 points) and draw one (1 point) for a total of 4 points, whereas Ajax and MUFC only got 1 point each for a draw each. Nothing to do with sum or Aggregate goals in the two games.

    In the Real Madrid - PSG match they got 3 point each, but RM got 3 goals and PSG 2, which can count as RM advancing on Aggregate or sum of goals.

    The intern could say that he believed Aggregate was referred to the sum of points.

    But, I rest my case on the clumsy intern. :-DDD
    Hey, Juan! Nice to hear from you again!
    Live Score has always used the indication "AGG" for a team that won a two-legged playoff, it doesn't matter if it won by points, goals or away goals.
    Tchau!
    Jesus Petry
    --- SBBSecho 3.06-Win32
    * Origin: SportNet Gateway Site (24:150/2)
  • From juanva...@gmail.com@24:150/2 to rec.sport.soccer on Thu Mar 17 06:19:39 2022
    On Wednesday, 16 March 2022 at 16:33:25 UTC+2, jesu...@ wrote:
    Em quarta-feira, 16 de mar|oo de 2022 |as 09:51:49 UTC-3, juanvi...@ escreveu:
    Hey, Juan! Nice to hear from you again!

    Live Score has always used the indication "AGG" for a team that won a two-legged playoff, it doesn't matter if it won by points, goals or away goals.

    Thank, Jesus.
    Yes, I did miss something... :-|
    --- SBBSecho 3.06-Win32
    * Origin: SportNet Gateway Site (24:150/2)