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New football rules approved

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billybeeru

Player Valuation: £15m
http://www.theguardian.com/football/2016/jan/08/kickoffs-backwards-rule-changes

Kick-offs can now go backwards, and other rule changes newly approved

Sending players off for pre-match fights. Permitting the ball to go in any direction at kick-off. Allowing more players to be treated on the field. Stopping teams benefiting from players being punished.

These are a few of the innovations contained in rewritten laws of the game, overhauled by football’s rule-makers in an attempt to remove inconsistencies and make them more user-friendly.

A 22,000-word document has been halved to 12,000 words over the last 18 months. The new laws were approved by the International Football Association Board in London this week, will be ratified at the body’s March meeting and will be in force for the European Championships starting in June.

David Elleray, who formulated the comprehensive revision of the laws, hopes rules will no longer be open to as much interpretation. “We are trying to help situations which tend to occur very often and are a bit crazy,” said Elleray, a former Premier League referee.

“We have tried to use much clearer language. We tried to avoid a lot of unnecessary repetition and we tried to make it up-to-date. Because the laws have evolved piecemeal and no one has done a comprehensive review there have been inconsistencies.”

Here is how the biggest revamp of the rules of football in 135 years could look, largely through Elleray’s explanations:

Kick-off
The current law says the ball must go forward at kick-off and players have to be in their own half. The rule is being changed to allow the ball to go in any direction at kick-off as long as it moves.

Pre-match red cards
Citing a row in the tunnel between Patrick Vieira and Roy Keane before an Arsenal-Manchester United match in 2005, Elleray highlighted how they could not have been sent off in the event of a full-scale fight. The laws were written at a time before it was customary for teams to line up next to each other in the tunnel before kick-off.

In future referees will be able to punish red-card offences any time after the pre-match inspection.

Elleray: “[Fighting players] would be banned from playing the match but both teams would still start with 11 because they would be able to use one of the named substitutes. They would lose a substitute.”

Leaving the field after treatment
Elleray: “If a player is injured from a challenge which is punished by a red or yellow card, he can have quick treatment on the field of play and does not have to leave. It always seemed unfair that the victim team was down to 10 men and the guilty team has 11 against 10.”

Quick return
Elleray: “If a player goes off to change his boots, at the moment he has to wait until the game is stopped and the referee has to go and check his boots before he can play again. Now we are saying his boots or whatever can be checked by the fourth official, the assistant referee even, and [the player can] come back during play.”

Grabbing opponents
Elleray: “Two players go off the field of play. One tries to get back on to play the ball and the other one grabs him off the field of play to stop him going back on. At the moment the referee gives a red or yellow card and restarts with a drop ball, which is clearly wrong. So we will be giving a free-kick on the touchline or the goal-line. If it is inside the penalty area, it can be a penalty kick.”

Blocking goals
Elleray: “If a [non-playing] substitute at the moment comes on and dives and stops the goal, it is an indirect free-kick.” And then there is the unlikely but not unforeseen situation in which a team physician comes on to the field during play. “If the doctor does it, it is a drop ball, which again is wrong for football. Their team benefits from breaking the law. So they will become direct free-kicks or penalty kicks.”

Penalty shootouts
Elleray: “If a player gets sent off during kicks from the penalty mark, the other team does not also go down to 10. So if it goes all the way through, the guilty team’s best player takes a second kick against the innocent team’s worst player.”

In future both teams will be reduced to the same number of penalty-takers.

Elleray: “We are trying to make sure the laws are fair and support the team that has been offended against and do not reward people for breaking the laws of the game.”

Offside inconsistency
Elleray: “Part of the law book says when players commit an offside offence you give a free-kick where the offence occurred. The other part of the law book says you give a free-kick where the player was when he was in the offside position. So a player can actually move 20 yards from being in an offside position … and it is only the moment he plays the ball that he is penalised. The law tells you to give the free-kick in two different places.

“So, in future, the free-kick will always be given where he commits the offside offence, even if he is in his own half, because you cannot be in an offside position in your own half, but you can go back into your own half to commit an offside offence.”

Logo loophole
Club logos will be allowed on corner flags. Elleray: “It happens in the Premier League but is actually against the laws of the game.”

Common sense
Elleray: “We are encouraging referees to referee according to the spirit of the game and to use common sense. ... If you can play the game and there is a minor breach of the law, report it to the authorities and sort it out afterwards. Do not be too black and white in minor areas.”

That means, for example, in the grass-roots game, not abandoning a match if one of the four corner flags is broken.
 

A lot of loophole-closing, but still nothing being done about the frankly ludicrous 'triple punishment' rule of a player being sent off, a penalty given, and a suspension, all for one tackle. It would be quite a break from the rules, but I'd like to see the captain of the opposition be given the choice of a sending off or a penalty, as I don't think such an infringement deserves both punishments.
 
pretty much a whole lot of nothing there. nothing is going to impact a game much.

why not proper retrospective action! for all types of cheating, diving, shirt pulling, hugging at set pieces etc. But when a player goes down injured (more often than not feigning it) - why don't they do something about kicking the ball back? teams kick the ball out in a sporting way and the opposition go and blast it all the way back to their keeper. why don't they give the team who kicked it out a throw-in parallel to where the ball was kicked out from?
 

A lot of loophole-closing, but still nothing being done about the frankly ludicrous 'triple punishment' rule of a player being sent off, a penalty given, and a suspension, all for one tackle. It would be quite a break from the rules, but I'd like to see the captain of the opposition be given the choice of a sending off or a penalty, as I don't think such an infringement deserves both punishments.

red card for denying goalscoring opportunity - result = goalscoring opportunity from the spot. It's ludicrous.
 
red card for denying goalscoring opportunity - result = goalscoring opportunity from the spot. It's ludicrous.
I think the idea is that it is supposed to discourage the defender from making the foul in the first place. The opposition still have their goal scoring opportunity, but your team is now down to 10. Why make the foul?
 
A lot of loophole-closing, but still nothing being done about the frankly ludicrous 'triple punishment' rule of a player being sent off, a penalty given, and a suspension, all for one tackle. It would be quite a break from the rules, but I'd like to see the captain of the opposition be given the choice of a sending off or a penalty, as I don't think such an infringement deserves both punishments.
Can't agree.
There needs to be a deterrent to fouling someone through on goal. If the outcome is the same regardless of the foul, where is the incentive not to foul?
The one change that does bother me is allowing more treatment on the field. 1-0 up with 5 minutes to go? Players are going to feign injuries even more than they do now.
 
I think the idea is that it is supposed to discourage the defender from making the foul in the first place. The opposition still have their goal scoring opportunity, but your team is now down to 10. Why make the foul?

most of the times they're genuine attempts to win the ball, just missed tackles. in the event that they do it on purpose i.e. when the striker is about to score then fair enough.

that's where the extra freedom of referee's interpretation should come in. Don't stick everything to laws.
 
When I saw 'Grabbing Opponents' I thought finally something official being said about penaly box grappling but no it is about something that very rarey happens.
 

If hugging and grabbing players off the field is being cracked down on then Jurgen is in for a shock, the bell.
 
Relieved that they have at last addressed the issue of a ball not moving at kick off.

Indeed! thank God they can now play it backwards rather than playing it two inches forward then hoofing it 30 yards back. I know that was keeping many of us awake. Sometimes during games... :)
 

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