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Post by (•̃_•̃) the ball on Jun 8, 2012 12:27:01 GMT 10
scare, In an attacking situation play is only stopped immediately if a player is SERIOUSLY injured. "A player goes down" doesn't sound like a serious injury. And if a player is SERIOUSLY injured then who cares what the score is and who is attacking. Player safety is paramount and nothing else takes priority.
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Post by scarecrow on Jun 8, 2012 13:44:23 GMT 10
scare, In an attacking situation play is only stopped immediately if a player is SERIOUSLY injured. "A player goes down" doesn't sound like a serious injury. And if a player is SERIOUSLY injured then who cares what the score is and who is attacking. Player safety is paramount and nothing else takes priority. I agree but what is being suggested will not be feasible because of what I have said.
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Post by ekanS on Jun 8, 2012 14:25:00 GMT 10
How about this, i am talking about youth level,when player goes down and warrants attention, time is stopped, player goes off the field no matter what. This will make you think twice about wasting time. If coach wants the same player to come back on, then he needs to wait 60 seconds or 90 seconds before he comes on but no other substitutes in the mean time, they play man short.
If another player is substituted in his place, then the injured player cannot come back on for 5 minutes. This avoids playing a man down.
You wont get a perfect solution but this may be an improvement.
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Post by (•̃_•̃) the ball on Jun 8, 2012 16:13:56 GMT 10
banned, The current directions are that if a player needs to be assisted by a team official then they MUST leave the field of play before play restarts. Once off, they may not enter the field of play until the next restart and only with the permission of the referee. Any substitution/interchange must be done with the permission of the referee as well. Almost every referee is good at sniffing if an injury is genuine or to waste time. If the injury is not genuine then referee orders the player off the field then delays the coming back or substitution until the next restart. This is what should happen as the laws stand right now and i think its sufficient to stop faking injuries.
If we punish teams who suffer genuine injuries by reducing them to 10 men then that might encourage the opposition to inflict injury on the other team in a subtle way. Even if they get cautioned they would still play with a numerical advantage for a short while.
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Post by scarecrow on Jun 8, 2012 16:29:25 GMT 10
You have brought up another bug bear of mine. If a player gets fouled and the referee awards a free kick but that player requires treatment why should the team who has the injured player be disadvantaged
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Post by commanderwhite on Jun 8, 2012 17:17:38 GMT 10
We do in our district & so should everyone else - It's in the FIFA Law Chart.
There is NO stoppage time for women's football - also in the FIFA Law Chart - though I have noticed that they do in international matches.
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Post by shinpad on Jun 8, 2012 17:19:02 GMT 10
You blokes think too much. Shut up and get on with it girls !
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Post by ballboy on Jun 8, 2012 19:29:20 GMT 10
All FNSW competitions stipulate that added time, if any, must be played including the women's competitions. Players that leave the field after treatment by a 'physio' can come back onto the field when the game has been restarted and with the permission of the referee. If the ball is in play only from the sidelines, if out of play then, anywhere.
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Post by (•̃_•̃) the ball on Jun 8, 2012 20:55:46 GMT 10
There is NO stoppage time for women's football - also in the FIFA Law Chart - I refer to the Law charts frequently and have never seen this. Can you tell me where it is (which law, which page...)
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Post by scarecrow on Jun 9, 2012 12:06:35 GMT 10
All FNSW competitions stipulate that added time, if any, must be played including the women's competitions. Players that leave the field after treatment by a 'physio' can come back onto the field when the game has been restarted and with the permission of the referee. If the ball is in play only from the sidelines, if out of play then, anywhere. It doesn't happen in juniors and certainly not reserve grade and 1st grade occasionally.
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Post by ekanS on Jun 9, 2012 12:48:45 GMT 10
Twatpad you are banned from this topic.
My suggestion is also to sub the player so they are not penalised. When play restarts the linesman tells the player he can go back on straight away, i wasnt aware of the next restart and dont recall ever seeing it.
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Post by ballboy on Jun 11, 2012 20:55:19 GMT 10
banned, the linesman (sic) doesn't have the right to allow the player to returned to the field, that is solely the job of the referee.
scarecrow, It is written. A couple of years back in the WSL under 16s preliminary final a Western player was injured and taken to hospital after 30 minutes the referee called full time with 3 minutes still to be played. After an appeal FNSW ruled that the 16s had to return to Sydney to play the final 3 minutes on a Friday night. A joke considering players came from as far away as Dubbo and Parkes to play in this game. I'm not sure who the opposition were.
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Post by ekanS on Jun 12, 2012 17:58:35 GMT 10
Didnt know the linesman couldnt do it, but we have asked the linesman in several games over the years and he just waves us on, not even looking to see if the ref is aware of it.
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Post by shinpad on Jun 12, 2012 18:27:51 GMT 10
The linesman is wrong. Maybe not experienced or new to it.
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Post by ballboy on Aug 14, 2012 20:53:55 GMT 10
Next year if a 'goal' is scored directly from a drop ball, it will be disallowed and the restart will be either a goal kick or a corner.
Not sure what happens if the ball is kicked from the half way line.
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