<Anchor> In



Brazilian football, it is definitely an explicit goal, but the so-called'ghost goal' that is recognized as a goal is a hot topic.

If you forget it, check out the controversial'goals that are not like goals'.



This is reporter Kim Hyung-yeol.



<Reporter> This



is a scene from a local soccer tournament in Brazil.



The relay team is disappointed as the powerful right footed shot hits the post and bounces out.



[I don't want the ball to go into the goal~]



But after the assistant referee declares the goal, he runs toward the center line, and when the referee acknowledges the goal, the relay team hastily change his attitude.



[Go~~~~All~~~~!]



[The ball crossed the goal line!

It's a goal!]



The game was a one-on-one with this phantom goal.



'Ghost Goal' was often controversial enough to have the term'Ghost Goal'.



George Hearst's winning goal, who won England in the 1966 World Cup final, is known as the archetype of the'Ghost Goal'.



The heading goal of Leverkusen goalkeeper Kisling, which came out of the 2013 Bundesliga, is also a representative'ghost goal'.



On the slow screen, the ball went into the net next to it, which was clearly torn, and it was the winning goal.



Coach Mourinho also saw the damage of a'ghost goal' in the 2005 Champions League, which was the Chelsea command tower.



[Director Mourinho: Lost in the semi-finals because of'no goals, not goals'.]



Most of the ghost bones are difficult to identify with the naked eye, but in this case,'goals' are recognized as if they are possessed by something in a situation where they are outright, which is becoming more controversial and topical.



(Video editing: Jeongtaek Lee, CG: Yoonjung Kang)