The goalkeeper feels humiliated, there is no need to do that.That was the view of former Queens Park Rangers and Blackpool manager Ian Holloway after Barcelonas Cruyff penalty on Sunday, when Lionel Messi rolled the ball forward for Luis Suarez to score.While some lauded the penalty, which was similar to one scored by former Barcelona player and head coach Johan Cruyff in 1982, there were questions over whether it was disrespectful to opponents Celta Vigo. We take a look at some of the opinions, from those who say it was genius to others who say it made them uncomfortable... Luis Suarez celebrates with Lionel Messi after combining to score from the penalty spot Barcelona head coach Luis EnriqueThere will be those who like it and those who dont. As well as winning titles, here we try to entertain people and win in a spectacular and sporting manner. You can take a penalty like that, its legal and theres a Cruyff penalty we all know.In this country, a kick (at an opponent) is more readily accepted than anything fancy. We dont care about that. What we have to do is enjoy our football, respect our opponents, try to show were better through football.Im sorry but I dont think anything special happened. Im used to seeing them train and there they are even better. German newspaper Bild asked whether the penalty was arrogant or genius Celta Vigo head coach Eduardo BerizzoThe penalty was taken in a different way, theres nothing more to it. I am hurt by the number of goals we let in, not by how they scored. Their players are respectful with the rival: they score goals as they can, as they want to and as they are allowed to.Barcelona vice-president Jordi MestreMy personal opinion is that at this point, if we see this show and talk about disrespect, thats not so good.I dont know if they rehearsed the penalty. I think they talked about it and it went well for the level of football theyre at.Sky Sports Spanish football expert Guillem BalagueStraight away the debate in Spain started, was it disrespectful or not? Football, especially in England, is made up of controversies and personalities whereas in Spain it is tactics and personalities, with controversies only recently growing into the game.Those characteristics didnt bring any of us into football, instead it was moments of magic and Barcas penalty will have evoked memories of Cruyffs penalty from 1982 - a moment which is historic and not viewed as disrespectful in any way.In Spain there is a lot of talk about whether this is disrespectful or not. That is a view that has been used by many to criticise Barcelona. Most of the discontent comes from Madrid and it is a media strategy to please the Madrid fans who want to hear that, it has nothing to do with people thinking about football and is more to do with the business side of things - ie selling newspapers. Lionel Messi passed the ball for Luis Suarez to score To those who claim that this was out of order and would like to see none of this in football then I implore you to go and find another game because I wish there were more moments like this.You cannot label everything in the same way, there are things that players do when the game is over that do feel disrespectful. A tactical gesture or a skill perhaps, something that would be done when playing with friends and not when your four or five goals to the good.But that goal doesnt fall into that bracket for me. What would the opinion be if Ronaldo and Karim Benzema or Juan Mata and Wayne Rooney tried something similar? Everyone is talking about this goal so, for me, that must be for a good reason.Barcelona forward NeymarThat play had been rehearsed and it was supposed to be for me. The most important thing is that the play worked.Barcelona midfielder Andres IniestaMy reaction to the penalty was one of surprise because of the way they ran it, but Im happy it was a goal. You can take them like that too. Enrique defends Suarez, Messi Luis Enrique has rejected suggestions that the penalty was intended to embarrass Celta We are the first ones to try to respect our opponents and the way they play. I do not think that the penalty was disrespectful.Ian Holloway on Sky Sports NowIf I was the opposition manager I would be fuming, if I was the manager of the player who scored I would be saying if you want him to score a hat-trick then he can take the penalty. The goalkeeper feels humiliated, there is no need to do that; a classy club and classy team dont need to do that.Sky Sports Spanish football commentator Terry GibsonI do understand why it would be accused of being disrespectful, but we are going to remember it for a long time. The game was quite tight, it wasnt the kind of game you thought they would do this. Terry Gibson gives his verdict on the penalty Its indicative of how those front three are playing and enjoying their football.Marca journalist Tomas GuaschIf Ronaldo and Benzema did it they would be sent to Afghanistan.Ex-Arsenal defender Nigel Winterburn on Sky Sports NowIf I was playing and it was my team I would be uncomfortable with my team-mates doing that, but the rules state you dont have to directly strike the ball. Lionel Messi scored a fantastic free-kick in the 6-1 victory If it was my team-mates I would be uncomfortable because you have to show some respect to the opposition and, as an ex-player, that says we are not giving them the respect they deserve. I am uncomfortable with it.Sky Sports Now guest and former Norwich striker Iwan RobertsIts genius but it shows a lack of respect. If you tried that in a practice match your manager would be ripping your head off, even if you scored. They dont need to be doing it.Brighton manager Chris HughtonI think most people will see it for the quality it is. It was probably planned, although it didnt look like the manager knew it was going to happen. Its not disrespectful, but its easier to do that when you are 3-1 up.Rangers boss Mark WarburtonWhether you call it showboating and take it the wrong way or just admire the fact they have so much skill and creativity that you stand back and applaud, I dont know.It could be seen as disrespectful and showboating but you see the reaction from the guys at the Nou Camp and its different. You are looking at some of the finest players in world football and for me it is a joy to watch them play.Celta defender Gustavo CabralIts annoying that it ended up being a goal. But not because of the way they took it. Bad sportsmanship? Listen as Jon Driscoll and Terry Gibson continue the debate on the latest La Liga Weekly podcast What did you make of Barcelonas penalty? Have your say by leaving a comment or tweeting @SkyFootball...Also See:Enrique defends Suarez, MessiBalague: Moment of magicWATCH: Barcas Cruyff penaltyBarcelona 6-1 Celta VigoFake White Sox Jerseys .com) - Rafael Nadal, Andy Murray and Roger Federer were easy first-round winners Tuesday at the Australian Open. Wholesale White Sox Jerseys . The return match will take place next Wednesday. Udinese leads Fiorentina 2-1 in the other semifinal. Napoli staged a second-half comeback from two goals down after Gervinhos opener and a stunning strike from Kevin Strootman. https://www.cheapwhitesox.com/ . Andrew Luck lost his favourite target and the Indianapolis locker room lost one of its most revered leaders when Reggie Wayne was diagnosed Monday with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee that will cost him the rest of the season. Custom Chicago White Sox Jerseys . John Tavares, Thomas Vanek and Kyle Okposo were also being counted on to slow down sizzling Rangers forward Rick Nash. That plan didnt go so well early. White Sox Jerseys China . In the response filed Wednesday to the complaint by 30-year-old Alexander Bradley, attorneys say the former University of Florida player is invoking his Fifth Amendment right that protects people from incriminating themselves.TORONTO -- The Honda Indy Toronto is celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, and while that makes it one of the most stable and long-running events on the Verizon IndyCar Series calendar, much has changed over the past three decades.If you attended the race in the early years, when it was known as the Molson Indy, you wouldnt recognize the town or the track. The Greater Toronto Area (GTA) is one of the fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the world, with a population now approaching seven million. Much of the development is in the form of high-rise housing, and even though the race track runs through the grounds of the Canadian National Exhibition, it couldnt avoid the urban sprawl, with construction of a new luxury hotel forcing the most extensive changes to the racing layout since 1995.The changes made back then opened up the track and addressed concerns resulting from a 1994 crash in which driver Bryan Herta fractured his pelvis. This years changes are in roughly the same place, but they are set to have the opposite effect, with the racing line through Turns 10 and 11 that close out the lap barely wide enough to accommodate a single Indy car.?The track surface is also bumpier than ever, and changes to curbs and the moving of a tire barrier in Turn 8 also raised concerns from the drivers. But the biggest potential safety hazard is the pit lane, which has been moved to the opposite side of the track (drivers left), a change that could place mechanics changing right-side tires in serious jeopardy.?All that resulted in a contentious 35-minute drivers meeting to kick off the weekend, and potential changes for race day could include moving the start of the race to the much longer back straight.?Changes like that to a racetrack can have a larger effect than meets the eye, so well just have to see how it goes once we get out there, remarked IndyCar Series points leader Simon Pagenaud before practice.?The event has changed in other ways from the glory days. Molsons in-house promotional company, Molstar Sports and Entertainment, papered the GTA with posters and flyers and the event had a strong television presence until Molson pulled out in 2006.?The CART-IRL split failed to kill off the Toronto race, though it wasnt run in the reunification year of 2008. But the event is a shadow of its former self, when it routinely drew three-day crowds of 170,000, making it the second largest sporting event in Canada. The recruitment of Honda Canada in 2009 in the role of title sponsor to replace Molson helped matters, but Toronto race crowds are maybe half of what they used to be.?Some of that can be attributed to a lesser Canadian presence in Indy car racing. Scott Goodyear, now a television announcer for ABC, was a big draw in the early days of the race, but it was the arrival of Paul Tracy and Greg Moore into the CART-sanctioned Indy car series in the first half of the 1990s that really boosted the sports popularity in Canada. Jacques Villeneuve, Patrick Carpentier and Alex Tagliani also played important roles as prominent Canadian Indy car drivers, a mantle now taken by James Hinchcliffe.? ?The Toronto native (and Honda driver) has been a ubiquitous presence promoting the eventt?in local media in recent weeks, and hes pleased that the Indy is back in its traditional mid-July date after attendance dipped a year ago when the race was run a month earlier to accommodate the citys hosting of the Pan-Am Games.dddddddddddd?Ive heard lots of good things about the race this year, about ticket sales and corporate sales and things like that, Hinchcliffe told reporters earlier this week. Were coming off having to move around the date last year and working around this hotel being built, so Im looking at this as a fresh start for the race. ?Im looking forward to doing my bit to make this one of the great races again.?The race has certainly produced its share of memorable on-track action over the past 30 years, and the changes made to the circuit this year are likely to make the event even more of a crash-fest than usual.?Bobby Rahal won the inaugural event in 1986, but it was his longtime rival Michael Andretti who stamped his authority on Toronto, winning seven times between 1989 and 2001.?Tracy is the only Canadian to have won the race, triumphing in 1993 and during his championship season of 2003, when he elicited a roar from the crowd by announcing, My name is Paul, and I am Canadian! from the podium to mimic a popular Molson ad campaign of the era.?Among active drivers, Scott Dixon, Sebastien Bourdais and Will Power are two-time Toronto winners, while Josef Newgarden of Ed Carpenter Racing is the defending champion.?Newgarden, who is coming off his first win of the 2016 season one week ago at Iowa Speedway, confirmed that the changes to the track are a major topic of conversation among drivers and teams.?I think were going to have to ease into it, Newgarden said. The last three corners are trickier than last year -- a lot tighter, with slower speeds, which will hopefully help the run up to Turn 1 and create more passing. That would be the benefit if we find one.?We talked in the drivers meeting about how we are going to prepare for a two-wide start, and Im not sure what they are going to do, he added. They were waiting to see feedback from [practice] Session 1, but Id be surprised if they switch it to the back stretch, especially from a promoters standpoint. My guess is there will be a discussion and a vote, but I think were just going to have to go really, really slow at the start of the race.?Newgarden, who sits second in the IndyCar Series standings, said he is still nursing the effects of the broken right wrist and clavicle he sustained in an accident at Texas Motor Speedway on June 12. While he is no longer wearing a brace on his right hand, (It was taking up too much room and I couldnt grip the wheel) he doesnt expect to return to full strength for another two to three weeks.?I really thought Iowa was going to be the biggest challenge, but I havent been on a street course since Texas and I forgot how demanding they are, he added. Youre really getting rocked around this place and Im sure Im leaving some time on the table. The hand is the biggest thing, because when you get hit by curbs and everything, it just hurts. ' ' '