by Greatwesternline »
20 Apr 2023 21:02
SCIAG Greatwesternline SCIAG Deliberate handball is not a cautionable offence.
There are two clauses in the laws that require certain types of handball to be punished with a caution, when a player:
- handles the ball to interfere with or stop a promising attack
- handles the ball in an attempt to score a goal (whether or not the attempt is successful) or in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent a goal
And DOGSO or denying a goal is obviously a straight dismissal.
Carroll handled in the process of scoring a goal, the Luton player handled in an aerial challenge by the touch line. The officials applied the laws correctly and consistently.
Indeed. Many people's complaints with refs come simply from their ignorance of the rules. I was watching Walthamstow versus Biggleswade on Tuesday, and the 'Stow manager was berating the lino for why the ref had not allowed a drop ball to be contested for them in an attacking position compared to one earlier when Biggleswade were in an attacking position.
The lino calmy explained that drop balls in the box are not contested. Those are the rules. The manager was completely stumped.
As an aside, i feel attempting to deliberately score a goal with your hand is as bad an offence as attempting to stop one with your hand, and should therefore be a straight red.
Attempting to stop is only a yellow.
Actually stopping is a red.
There is a difference between actually scoring and actually stopping. If you get caught scoring a goal with your hand then the goal is disallowed and you have gained no advantage. There is not, however, any mechanism to award the goal that gets blocked with the hand. You can only award a penalty, and ask Asamoah Gyan how that can turn out…
All true. But.....if a player attempts to score a goal with his hand and doesn't get spotted it's a goal, every bit as important to a match as the denial of a obvious goal scoring opportunity. If he does get spotted it's a yellow. The risk to reward is quite heavily in the players favour compared to that of a defender who decides to take out a player through on goal. If Carroll wasn't already on a yellow already, his cheating would all things considered have been worth the risk, but it really shouldn't be.
I feel the potential advantage of handballing in a goal, it needs to be a stronger disincentive than a yellow.
I do genuinely believe that on the asamoah gyan situation, the ref should be able to award a penalty goal, same as a penalty try in rugby. It would remove those situations from the game we love entirely as players would have no incentive to do it.