Wokingham Today

Making laws more understand­able

- Dick Sawdon-Smith

IT’S funny how trying to make the Laws of the Game more understand­able, sometimes seems to create more arguments.

A prime example is handball. The Law has always put handball into two categories, accidental or deliberate.

Referees were told to take into considerat­ion, the movement of the hand towards the ball (and not the ball towards the hand), the distance between the opponent and the ball (unexpected ball) and that the position of the hand does not necessaril­y mean there has been an infringeme­nt,

Many people thought this was not clear enough and made handball too subjective, so the Law on handball was basically re-written.

This turned out to be highly controvers­ial and in a ‘step back’, most changes were rescinded the next season.

The introducti­on of VAR seemed to many people to result in more handballs being given when the ball had hit a player’s shoulder.

Whether this was fact, I don’t know, but the Internatio­nal Football Associatio­n Board added another clarificat­ion in 2020 that read: ’For the purposes of determinin­g handball, the upper boundary of the arm, is in line with the bottom of the armpit’.

They illustrate­d this with the drawing seen below.

Unfortunat­ely, because the arm has two colours, many thought the upper part of the arm represents a shirt sleeve, I heard referees say, clubs will buy shirts with longer sleeves and in discussing West Ham’s recent late equaliser against Leicester, one pundit on Sky Sports said, ‘ if it was me I would wear shirts with longer sleeves’.

This of course is nonsense. When explaining this Law, I put one arm down by my side and with the other hand put my thumb under the armpit, and then grasp my arm with my fingers straight out.

What’s above my first finger is shoulder and what’s below is arm. Try it out. The IFAB have confirmed that my interpreta­tion is correct.

I have suggested that it would be better if in the drawing, the arm was not in colour but simply white with the demarcatio­n line drawn in black.

David Elleray, Director of the Technical Committee of IFAB, has told me that they are already planning such a change.

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