Okay, so it's not strictly TV but I just read the following article on "new" LOTG on the BBC website - a really amateur piece of journalism!!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/36256441
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/36256441
A free-kick or penalty can only be awarded while the ball is in play
There have been a lot of clarifications and simplification of language - that's probably all this is.for instance law 12
is that new
If a substitute, team official or outside agent stops a ball going into the goal, the referee can apply the advantage rule and award a goal.
Players injured by opponents who are then sent off do not need to leave the pitch for treatment.
And where are the actual changes published? Just in the new law book for 2016?
Yeah there's some bad ones around in Australia too. apparently the fact that VC doesn't require contact to be a red card is revolutionary!!
This is the best place describing the changes ...
http://www.theifab.com/files/4 - Presentation Law Changes_v0.3.pdf
Thanks. 2016/17 book doesn't seem to have made it yet to the FIFA site... so we have explanation without the wording it explains! Could a GK really get sent off for coming off his line at a penalty and a retake? How does that play with "spirit of the game" and referees who've got used to allowing a bit of leeway to GKs? As with 6 seconds to release the ball (no change there presumably) how far off the line is too far? Nothing, 6 inches, a yard, halfway to the penalty spot? Bad enough now for deciding whether to order a retake, but sending off a GK in a World Cup Final shoot-out when all subs have been used?
Thanks. 2016/17 book doesn't seem to have made it yet to the FIFA site... so we have explanation without the wording it explains! Could a GK really get sent off for coming off his line at a penalty and a retake? How does that play with "spirit of the game" and referees who've got used to allowing a bit of leeway to GKs? As with 6 seconds to release the ball (no change there presumably) how far off the line is too far? Nothing, 6 inches, a yard, halfway to the penalty spot? Bad enough now for deciding whether to order a retake, but sending off a GK in a World Cup Final shoot-out when all subs have been used?
That's because FIFA is no longer responsible for publishing the Laws of the Game. The IFAB has taken over - which is why the link given by PinnerPaul is to their site (and why that is where you will find everything related to the Laws in future). As per IFAB Circular No. 1:Thanks. 2016/17 book doesn't seem to have made it yet to the FIFA site... so we have explanation without the wording it explains!
[...] from now on, all matters related to The IFAB and the Laws of the Game will be communicated directly by the IFAB.
Actually, section 3.7 refers to an extra person on the field of play rather than a thrown object but the principle is the same. As it says in the explanations section, this goes together with section 3.9 where it is stated:The part you quoted makes sense, even if poorly written. Say a sub behind the goal throws his water bottle at a ball to stop his team conceding a goal because no defenders are anywhere near. Ball hits the bottle, continues into the goal. It's a goal.
If, however, it was somebody of the opposing team who threw the bottle...well, think of it like advantage. That would be no goal.
It would also cover the unlikely but theoretically possible scenario of an extra person associated with a team coming on to prevent a goal against his team and who kicks the ball all the way up to the opposite end where it enters the opponent's goal.the referee must disallow the goal if the extra person was:
a player, substitute, substituted player, sent off player or team official of the team that scored the goal
Once again, that's in the explanations section:Under direct free kick, what exactly is the reason for including "If an offence involves contact it is penalised by a direct free kick or penalty kick"?
Explanation
Clarifies that a direct free kick must be awarded if an offence involves contact.
I'm not quite sure what point you're trying to make. It doesn't mean only offences involving contact can be DFK's, only that if there's contact, it can't be an IFK.In any case, attempting to kick or attempting to strike an opponent are DFK offences that by definition do not involve contact (which would mean it wasn't just an attempt).