In your opinion, but it is the requirement at the level you operate at.Yes. And that's still a dumb and outdated approach, regardless of what is expected.
In your opinion, but it is the requirement at the level you operate at.Yes. And that's still a dumb and outdated approach, regardless of what is expected.
The original post described a referee being told to slow a game down, jog 50 yards, carry out a slow caution procedure and then jog 50 yards back into position. In order to punish time wasting! If you can explain to me in what way that isn't bad advice, I'm all ears?You haven’t killed anyone but you are very disrespectful with the language you use - bad advice, dumb. You are not helping yourself. If you disagree with something, that’s fine, but there is a way in which to do it so not to alienate people & that’s to be constructive and fair minded with the language you use. And I’ve not seen any comments to say a Referee should be forced to do anything, let alone the technique for showing red/yellow cards.
And?In your opinion, but it is the requirement at the level you operate at.
Is it up to a referee to change anything at all though? Are we not there to enforce the LOTG and see that teams play fair and in the spirit of the game? It is the old Law 17 that is I think gives the OP the right to flash the card the way they did. Can we not just agree on that it is common sense and what the game would expect? I wouldn't have approached it in the same way, but I am not as experienced as the OP is and I feel that experience carries value but not the weight to change. Let us just say that when they have changed the various laws they weren't thinking about us referees or consulting the most experienced ones, but about giving a more spectator and tv friendly commercial product. Lest we forget that VAR has become an income stream on its own, with fees to show it, even though it was meant to be about making the game fairer.And?
As you know, I have very little interest in discussion being shut down by things that exist purely because no one has bothered to think about changing them. If it's a bad and outdated method which is defaulted to even when clearly not appropriate, why are you suggesting I can't say that?
Corner kick?? It is the old Law 17 that is I think gives the OP the right to flash the card the way they did.
Understood, but in the OP there is the added issue of the goalkeeper breaking up play when the opponents are seeking an equaliser.I would never do flash cards.
If a player if 50 yards away i show my watch being stopped very deliberately and i shout it too.
I eventually meet the player halfway and i go through the procedure.
That way justice is served and the non-offending team know the clock has stopped.
Of course people have bothered about changing things, but things are changed when considered prudent to do things. This doesn’t mean that guidance etc can’t be changed earlier & perhaps slow at times, but that’s just the way it is. At the end of the day if things work for you in the way that you do them & it has had a positive impact with players/the game, then any Match Day Coach/Observer should be able to identify this & praise.And?
As you know, I have very little interest in discussion being shut down by things that exist purely because no one has bothered to think about changing them. If it's a bad and outdated method which is defaulted to even when clearly not appropriate, why are you suggesting I can't say that?
We all supported a quick process for this C4The original post described a referee being told to slow a game down, jog 50 yards, carry out a slow caution procedure and then jog 50 yards back into position. In order to punish time wasting! If you can explain to me in what way that isn't bad advice, I'm all ears?
Bugger.Corner kick?
Both Chas and Rusty's advice is spot on.Thanks guys appreciate it.
Wasn’t sure on the terminology, I was informed I was being assessed so therefore presumed he was an ‘assessor’
Irrelevant really, but appreciate the general consensus that a ‘flash card’ was appropriate.
I would question why David jumped down my throat after my initial post saying it was bad advice then?We all supported a quick process for this C4
I'm not suggesting you can't say anything. But you aren't going to change the regulations and guidelines by having a moan on a refereeing forum, and I was talking about what the requirements actually are at the level you officiate in. Flash cards are not permitted at grass roots levels unless there is a valid reason, that is factual and not an opinion.And?
As you know, I have very little interest in discussion being shut down by things that exist purely because no one has bothered to think about changing them. If it's a bad and outdated method which is defaulted to even when clearly not appropriate, why are you suggesting I can't say that?
As your post directly followed his, I'd guess there was an (easily understandable) misunderstanding as to whether the 'bad advice' you were referring to was his advice or that of the MDC in the OP?I would question why David jumped down my throat after my initial post saying it was bad advice then?
Oh stop being so bl00dy diplomaticAs your post directly followed his, I'd guess there was an (easily understandable) misunderstanding as to whether the 'bad advice' you were referring to was his advice or that of the MDC in the OP?