rocker959
Well-known member
Is it April 1st?
Exactly what I thought .
Is it April 1st?
Full Story on BBC
Reforms being discussed include:
My views on each proposal
- Scrapping 45 minute halves and changing to 30 minutes of "in play" action Reading various reports on this, it says when the ball goes out of play, so does this mean when a free kick is awarded the clock is not stopped. If introduced it must be a full stopping clock so the clock stops whenever the ball goes out of play or the referee blows his whistle to stop play. The downsides are, how much longer than 90 minutes would the game be, and does it open up the tv game to more advert breaks with the game in the stadium only being restarted once the adverts have finished.
- Passing to yourself at a free-kick, corner and goal-kick No, this is not hockey
- A stadium clock which stops and starts along with the referee's watch Good idea, bit not all stadia have clocks
- Allowing the goal-kick to be taken even if the ball is moving No, all free licks must be from still ball
- A goal-kick being taken on the same side that the ball went out on Fans of a certain age, like me will remember when this was the rule, but was changed some years ago, don;t see the need to bring in
- A "clearer and more consistent definition" of handball Would be welcomed
- A player who scores a goal or stops a goal with his hands gets a red card Over the top and unnecessary
- A keeper who handles a backpass or throw-in from a team-mate concedes a penalty No, rarely happens anyway and an indirect free kick is sufficient
- The referee can award a goal if a player stops a goal being scored by handling on or close to the goal-line No, all goals scored must be from 'actual' goals
- Referees can only blow for half-time or full-time when the ball goes out of play No, the game should end after the completion of allocated time,
regardless of whether the ball is in or out of play- Captain only allowed to speak to ref Yes agree fully
- A penalty kick is either scored or missed/saved and players cannot follow up to score to stop encroachment into the penalty area No, but infringement should not be penalised in penalty missed or scored
- Changing order of penalty kicks in a shoot out Not fussed either way
P.S. If the suggestion for two 30 minute halves comes in what on earth are the fans who now leave after 85 minutes going to do? The mind boggles a little bit.
Full Story on BBC
Reforms being discussed include:
- Scrapping 45 minute halves and changing to 30 minutes of "in play" action This seems a bit odd, but would like to see it in action
- Passing to yourself at a free-kick, corner and goal-kick No
- A stadium clock which stops and starts along with the referee's watch Yes, the current spurious end of the game needs fomalising
- Allowing the goal-kick to be taken even if the ball is moving No
- A goal-kick being taken on the same side that the ball went out onSeems reasonable
- A "clearer and more consistent definition" of handball Yes
- A player who scores a goal or stops a goal with his hands gets a red card Yes
- A keeper who handles a backpass or throw-in from a team-mate concedes a penalty Not sure, maybe
- The referee can award a goal if a player stops a goal being scored by handling on or close to the goal-line No, the ref can't award a goal that isn't scored
- Referees can only blow for half-time or full-time when the ball goes out of play Yes, as part of formalising the end of play
- Captain only allowed to speak to ref Would be nice, won't happen
- A penalty kick is either scored or missed/saved and players cannot follow up to score to stop encroachment into the penalty area Don't think so
- Changing order of penalty kicks in a shoot out Maybe
One current rule that I find strange (and has not been addressed) is when a player requires treatment, following a foul by an opponent, and then has to leave the field. The opposition, despite being penalised, then have an advantage.