If a team is wasting time, then reverse the decision. Eg. if a keeper takes too long to take a goal kick, then it becomes a corner. A throw in one way would become a corner the other way. I would keep the law deliberately vague, eg. as soon as the team is not acting expeditiously then they will be penalised. So even currently unpunishable time wasting like getting a corner and no-one goes over to take it could be punished. Maybe have a "team warning" where the ref tells them that he has seen what they're doing and it's going to be interpreted strictly from now on. (This could be signalled by the ref facing the goal the tome-wasting team is defending, and making a big circle with his arm to indicate a clock. That's a signalled used in rugby league for a team warning for too many fouls.)
Absolutely. Been advocating this for yonks. Something for the 4th. official to do! Big clocks at the ground so that fans and players can see it - and the moment the ball crosses the touchline or goal-line, or the ref. blows for a foul or an injury, the clock stops: and it doesn't start until the free kick/goal kick/corner/throw in or drop ball is actually taken. 30 minutes (or maybe 35) actual playing time each way (which would probably equate to the duration of a match now). Obviously no added/injury time, as it will already have been taken into account while the clock was stopped.
I like the idea. It obliterates time wasting at a stroke. The argument against is that games would take all night, which they would at the moment. But there would be no need for substitutions to take hours etc, because the timewasting isn't achieving anything.
This
I posted same in a thread on NSC sometime back.
Time-wasting has become a professional art and a solution is needed.
Only down-side may be slowing momentum - but at least the watching fans won't feel they've been robbed of action time.
I know the FA like their rules to be implementable over all levels of football, grass-roots to Prem, but VAR has already broken that mould.
Not at all. If a team is knackered and is just hanging around trying to get their breath back before taking the kick (of whatever sort) or the throw in, the ref gives the ball to the other side and invites them to carry on playing on their own until such time as the first team chooses to join in again.It wouldn't obliterate time wasting, because it would still be done to stop momentum and the flow of the game when the other team is on top. And also when a team is knackered and under the cosh they could use such stoppages to their advantage. If there's a clock that stops, then the ref isn't going to be handing out yellow cards to easily, so we'd end up with more time wasting than we have now.
That's not what happens now and there's less chance of it happening if we stopped the clock. If you're suggesting the ref gives the ball to the other side when there is time wasting, we don't need the clock to stop, we can just start giving the ball to the other side now.Not at all. If a team is knackered and is just hanging around trying to get their breath back before taking the kick (of whatever sort) or the throw in, the ref gives the ball to the other side and invites them to carry on playing on their own until such time as the first team chooses to join in again.
Yes we could - but the solution with the clock is much better.That's not what happens now and there's less chance of it happening if we stopped the clock. If you're suggesting the ref gives the ball to the other side when there is time wasting, we don't need the clock to stop, we can just start giving the ball to the other side now.
Or like Rugby, the next time it goes out of play or is a dead ball?
Fair point... I'm surprised rugby doesn't blow the whistle exactly on 80 minutes.
Not sure the the egg chasing / pee drinking gang do, but I think the ball needs to go into touch or be dead.