The Star Malaysia

English crackdown on diving gets first airing in season openers

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LONDON: A new era in English football begins on Friday with a crackdown on players who cheat referees by diving to win a penalty or get an opponent sent off.

The second-tier Championsh­ip games between Sunderland and Derby and between Nottingham Forest and Millwall will be the first in which players can be retrospect­ively punished with twomatch bans if they are found guilty in a trial by video.

Diving for penalties has been a growing problem in the English game.

Most clubs in the top two divisions were accused of it at some point last season, with Marcus Rashford of Manchester United, Leroy Sane of Manchester City and Harry Kane of Tottenham Hotspur coming under the spotlight on a single weekend.

The crackdown, announced in May, is aimed at players who go unpunished during the match for actions that have a significan­t bearing on it. The Football Associatio­n will be able to charge them with ”successful deception of a match official”.

Its implementa­tion follows a year of feedback from players and officials and it is adapted from a similar regulation in force in Scotland.

While controvers­ies there are settled by a compliance officer, in England a three-person panel con- sisting of an ex-player, an ex-manager and an ex-referee will sit in judgment.

All three must agree there is a “clear and overwhelmi­ng case” for a charge to be brought.

If the player accepts a charge he will be given an immediate twomatch ban. If not, the case will go before an FA independen­t regulatory commission that deals with all disciplina­ry issues.

Players proved to be the innocent victims of cheating will have red cards, although not yellow ones, rescinded.

The crackdown is an extension of the FA’s ”not seen” measure, which led to retrospect­ive bans for Tyron Mings and Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c for clashes that were not picked up by officials in last season’s game between Bournemout­h and Manchester United.

Not everyone thinks the new measure goes far enough, however.

Former England manager Sam Allardyce criticised it for having no provision to remove cards for players wrongly accused of diving.

He also wants greater use of in-game video technology of the kind used at this summer’s Confederat­ions Cup when six ”game-changing decisions” were changed. World football body FIFA said the experiment had “really good results but many aspects should be improved”. — Reuters

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