Possible Football Reform Changes (Soccer)

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Wed-21-Jun-2017 17:15:32 · 5,103 comments
Admin and 4CW Head Booker

Warning: This is a bit of a long read.

A proposal to scrap 45-minute halves is to be looked at by football's lawmakers to deter time-wasting.

Instead, there could be two periods of 30 minutes with the clock stopped whenever the ball goes out of play.

Lawmaking body the International Football Association Board (Ifab) says matches only see about 60 minutes of "effective playing time" out of 90.

The idea is one of several put forward in a new strategy document designed to address football's "negativities".

Another proposal would see players not being allowed to follow up and score if a penalty is saved - if the spot-kick "is not successful", play would stop and a goal-kick awarded.

Other ideas include a stadium clock linked to a referee's watch and a new rule allowing players to effectively pass to themselves or dribble the ball when taking a free-kick.

Former Chelsea striker Gianfranco Zola is in favour of the proposal to cut matches to 60 minutes.

"I personally like this rule because there are so many teams who try to take advantage of it because they are winning and wasting time - so I think it is not a bad rule," he told the BBC.

"Football is fast enough. Some of the changes I don't like very much, but this is a good one."

Arsenal keeper Petr Cech echoed Zola's sentiments as he discussed the proposal on social media and wrote that at present there are "25 minutes of effective playing time per half so you would actually see more football".

The ideas have been put forward to Ifab by stakeholders in the game to tackle "on-field issues" and form part of what it calls its "Play Fair strategy", which has three aims of:

improving player behaviour and increasing respect
increasing playing time
increasing fairness and attractiveness

Part of the problem the new document highlights is that a 90-minute match has fewer than 60 minutes of playing time because of stoppages and time-wasting.

The document has put forward a number of radical ideas for discussion, but suggests some proposals can be implemented immediately without the need for law changes.

Most of these apply to trying to combat time-wasting. The document says match officials should be stricter on the rule which allows keepers to hold the ball for six seconds and be more stringent when calculating additional time.

Additionally, it suggests match officials stop their watch:

from a penalty being awarded to the spot-kick being taken
from a goal being scored until the match resumes from the kick-off
from asking an injured player if he requires treatment to play restarting
from the referee showing a yellow or red card to play resuming
from the signal of a substitution to play restarting
from a referee starting to pace a free-kick to when it is taken

Some of the proposals are already being tested. The idea of only allowing captains to speak to referees - to prevent match officials being mobbed - will be trialled at this summer's Confederations Cup, which starts on Saturday.

Another proposal involves changing the order of kick-taking in penalty shoot-outs, known as 'ABBA'. It is similar to a tie-break in tennis, with team A taking the first kick, then team B taking two, then team A taking two. That is a change from the traditional 'team A, team B, team A, team B' pattern.

New suggestions also include players who are being substituted leaving at the closest part of the touchline to them instead of at the halfway line.

This is where it gets interesting. One of the proposals would allow being able to dribble straight from a free-kick to "encourage attacking play as the player who is fouled can stop the ball and then immediately continue their dribble/attacking move". Other measures include:

passing to yourself at a free-kick, corner and goal-kick
a stadium clock which stops and starts along with the referee's watch
allowing the goal-kick to be taken even if the ball is moving
a goal-kick being taken on the same side that the ball went out on
a "clearer and more consistent definition" of handball
a player who scores a goal or stops a goal with his hands gets a red card
a keeper who handles a backpass or throw-in from a team-mate concedes a penalty
the referee can award a goal if a player stops a goal being scored by handling on or close to the goal-line
referees can only blow for half-time or full-time when the ball goes out of play
a penalty kick is either scored or missed/saved and players cannot follow up to score to stop encroachment into the penalty area

Who has come up with these proposals?

Ifab is made up of Fifa and the four British home football associations - of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - and is responsible for making the final decision on law changes.

Former English referee David Elleray is Ifab's technical director and has overseen the document.

"Referees, players, coaches and fans all agree that improving player behaviour and respect for all participants and especially match officials, increasing playing time and the game's fairness and attractiveness must be football's main priority," he said.

The next stage would involve the ideas being discussed at various meetings before decisions are taken on whether to develop them further or discard them.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/40311889

Interesting. One of these rules could go forward, none of them could or all of them could. Thoughts?

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Thu-22-Jun-2017 21:39:10 · 3,230 comments
Admin

Don't like the 60 minute proposal at all. Or the clock stopping. Time for penalties and all that are all added into injury time anyway so it's not like it's lost time.

a goal-kick being taken on the same side that the ball went out on

Isn't that already a rule? I thought it was, as they always seem to place the ball down on the side that the ball went out to. At least they do in the games that I can remember.

a player who scores a goal or stops a goal with his hands gets a red card

A player who stops a goal with his hands gets a ref card already. I'd agree with a player deliberately scoring with his hand getting a red though.

a keeper who handles a backpass or throw-in from a team-mate concedes a penalty

Would like to see this. So pointless with how it is at the moment. This shit is just stupid:

referees can only blow for half-time or full-time when the ball goes out of play

I would like to see this as well, mainly because of that stupid ref that stopped a game just as a player shot at goal a season or two ago. I mean he went against the current rules anyway as they shouldn't blow the whistle in a situation like that anyway, so a clear rule like the ball has to be out of play makes sense.

a penalty kick is either scored or missed/saved and players cannot follow up to score to stop encroachment into the penalty area

What a load of shit. Next they'll be proposing that if a free kick hits a wall then no attacking player can then hit the ball towards goal because they weren't ready for a follow up shot. Want to stop encroachment? Enforce the actual encroachment rules. Retake the penalty, and if they then encroach again it's a free kick to the opposition. Happens to a team once and they'll stop it.

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Thu-8-Mar-2018 22:15:30 · 105 comments
Mid Card

I’m down for 30 minute halves being timed with out of bounds plays, but why not adopt a replay rule as well for goals that are taken away by erroneous offside penalties?

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