Hes a little boy that seems to cry wolf, there will become a point when he is genuinely fouled then no-one will believe him anymore and he will miss out on genuine penalties!!
Then you can see my point, as much as we never admit it, certain players at all levels get reputations for doing certain things and that will follow them whether they like it or not!!I'm a Spurs fan. It's already happened twice this season where he was fouled and didn't get the call.
Is it possible to give a penalty and caution the player for simulation or would that be contradictory in law?
It would actualy be incorrect in law to give a pen and caution for simulation.Is it possible to give a penalty and caution the player for simulation or would that be contradictory in law?
Cautions for unsporting behaviour
attempts to deceive the referee e.g. by feigning injury or pretending to have been fouled (simulation)
......
Deceive
Act to mislead/trick the referee into giving an incorrect decision/disciplinary sanction which benefits the deceiver and/or their team
You could argue that the deception could be to make it look like a yellow/red card offence? It could be a straightforward penalty, but the attacker has exaggerated his fall to make the contact look more forceful than it actually is?It would actualy be incorrect in law to give a pen and caution for simulation.
By definition if you give a pen, he hasn't tricked you into anything and it cant be a deceive so its not a yellow card.
Yes you could if he is rolling on the ground holding to his legs etc. But in this case there was non of that. Simple exaggeration of going down.You could argue that the deception could be to make it look like a yellow/red card offence? It could be a straightforward penalty, but the attacker has exaggerated his fall to make the contact look more forceful than it actually is?
Sorry, I thought we were discussing the hypothetical can you give both a yellow and a penalty.Yes you could if he is rolling on the ground holding to his legs etc. But in this case there was non of that. Simple exaggeration of going down.
Is it possible to give a penalty and caution the player for simulation or would that be contradictory in law?
If the law still read as it did before the latest change, I would completely agree with you. However by adding the 'e.g.' (which was added in 2016) it opens the door for the possibility that feigning injury or pretending to have been fouled are not the only ways to deceive the referee - and that for instance, simply exaggerating the effects of the foul could be seen as a form of deception.It would actualy be incorrect in law to give a pen and caution for simulation.
By definition if you give a pen, he hasn't tricked you into anything and it cant be a deceive so its not a yellow card.
Using 'e.g' doesn't nullify the fact that it has to be a attempt to deceive the referee. And the definition of deceive is very clear, tricking the referee into making an incorrect decision. So whatever example you use has to fall within that definition. If you give a pen and that is all the player is attempting to get, no matter how exaggerated his actions are, by lotg definition, he has not attempted to deceive you so you can't caution him for attempting to deceive.If the law still read as it did before the latest change, I would completely agree with you. However by adding the 'e.g.' (which was added in 2016) it opens the door for the possibility that feigning injury or pretending to have been fouled are not the only ways to deceive the referee - and that for instance, simply exaggerating the effects of the foul could be seen as a form of deception.
Now, having said that, I don't personally think that mere exaggeration is enough to trigger a caution when the player has actually been fouled and that's partly because, as suggested by @Jacob Walukiewicz , it's fundamentally contradictory and I also don't happen to think it's what the law-makers intended or "what football would want/expect."
However the way the law is written now, I don't think you can say it's totally and necessarily incorrect to both award the foul and caution the player - although let me just stress again, that I don't think it should be done and I personally wouldn't recommend it.
Yes, but by accepting that deception includes attempting to deceive the referee into giving an incorrect sanction (which exaggerating an actual foul could do) surely you've in effect just conceded the argument that it's not totally against the law.Using 'e.g' doesn't nullify the fact that it has to be a attempt to deceive the referee. And the definition of deceive is very clear, tricking the referee into making an incorrect decision. So whatever example you use has to fall within that definition. If you give a pen and that is all the player is attempting to get, no matter how exaggerated his actions are, by lotg definition, he has not attempted to deceive you so you can't caution him for attempting to deceive.
As per my conversation with GrahamS, if he is attempting to to deceive you into sanctioning the opponent as well, then its a different story.
Yes, but by accepting that deception includes attempting to deceive the referee into giving an incorrect sanction (which exaggerating an actual foul could do) surely you've in effect just conceded the argument that it's not totally against the law.
Incidentally, and even though I still don't agree with them, I have seen plenty of referees in plenty of debates saying they would both award the foul and caution the player (and have done so). They also point to a number of examples on YouTube where top flight referees have done the same thing.
Here's an example of a player getting a second yellow card for "embellishing the contact" in an MLS game in 2014, even though his opponent was cautioned for the initial foul. I have to say that out of all the examples of exaggerating contact that I've seen, this was far from the worst and did not merit a caution even if the law did allow it.
Blas Perez second yellow card
I think the belief that it is OK to do this is more prevalent in the US, not least because the now-discontinued USSF 'Advice to Referees' document used to say that a player who "exaggerates the severity of a foul" was guilty of a cautionable offence and that mindset still persists.
Difference here is that the initial foul was called (when the opponent in white came over the player in red's back), then the push happened after the foul by white, and the red player embellished the force of the push.Here's an example of a player getting a second yellow card for "embellishing the contact" in an MLS game in 2014, even though his opponent was cautioned for the initial foul. I have to say that out of all the examples of exaggerating contact that I've seen, this was far from the worst and did not merit a caution even if the law did allow it.
Blas Perez second yellow card
I think the belief that it is OK to do this is more prevalent in the US, not least because the now-discontinued USSF 'Advice to Referees' document used to say that a player who "exaggerates the severity of a foul" was guilty of a cautionable offence and that mindset still persists.