i was wondering if it was possible to have an impact on the kicker?
It’s completely up to you. You decide whether or not there has been an impact on the kicker. I would suggest that if there isn’t any appeals or the game doesn’t expect it, it’s not a decision I would be enforcing. Especially in this case, for example, attacker has flung it over the bar, you have to ask whether encroachment from defenders behind him has really been a cause to that effect.i was wondering if it was possible to have an impact on the kicker?
I don’t quite understand what you mean here? If you’ve decided that the encroaching defender has impacted the kicker and the PK is to be retaken then that is your outcome. If he has encroached and following encroachment, has played or challenged for the ball, but you believe the encroachment has affected the kicker, it is the same outcome-retake the PK.So if there the encroaching defender impacts the kicker in the eyes of the referee, the penalty kick is retaken. What is the restart if the encroaching defender plays the ball or challenges for the ball and this prevents the opponents from scoring? The table in Law 14 only discusses if there is an impact on the kicker or goalkeeper. Thanks
Sorry, I was unclear. I meant to say that if the kicker is impacted then the PK is retaken. That's clear. But if the encroachment does NOT impact the kicker, then 2nd bullet point of the law states ...."A teammate of the goal keeper is penalized for encroachment only if...the encroaching player plays the ball or challenges an opponent for the ball and this prevents the opponent from scoring, attempting to score, etc. So imagine the encroaching teammate of the goal keeper does NOT impact the kicker but the goal keeper blocks the PK and the teammate gets to the rebound first and clears it. Does this fall under bullet point 2 and the teammate should be penalized? If so, what is the restart?It’s completely up to you. You decide whether or not there has been an impact on the kicker. I would suggest that if there isn’t any appeals or the game doesn’t expect it, it’s not a decision I would be enforcing. Especially in this case, for example, attacker has flung it over the bar, you have to ask whether encroachment from defenders behind him has really been a cause to that effect.
I don’t quite understand what you mean here? If you’ve decided that the encroaching defender has impacted the kicker and the PK is to be retaken then that is your outcome. If he has encroached and following encroachment, has played or challenged for the ball, but you believe the encroachment has affected the kicker, it is the same outcome-retake the PK.
Sorry, I was unclear. I meant to say that if the kicker is impacted then the PK is retaken. That's clear. But if the encroachment does NOT impact the kicker, then 2nd bullet point of the law states ...."A teammate of the goal keeper is penalized for encroachment only if...the encroaching player plays the ball or challenges an opponent for the ball and this prevents the opponent from scoring, attempting to score, etc. So imagine the encroaching teammate of the goal keeper does NOT impact the kicker but the goal keeper blocks the PK and the teammate gets to the rebound first and clears it. Does this fall under bullet point 2 and the teammate should be penalized? If so, what is the restart?
Thank you! I did not see this. My eyes went right to the table at the bottom that didn't address this situation.Note that the defender is still penalized and the offence is for encroachment (not for interfering).
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remember the wording of the law is not whether the encroachment impacted on the kicker but whether it 'clearly' impacted.i was wondering if it was possible to have an impact on the kicker?
If the encroachment is so bad that the player is somehow in the eye line of the kicker by the time he takes it then I suppose that could be justified as impacting the kicker. I think the main point of the law is to add common sense in that if a defender encroaches a small amount and the striker skies the ball over the bar or the keeper saves and holds it, why do we need to penalise?i was wondering if it was possible to have an impact on the kicker?
Why? Losing the goal or giving the other team a PK seems more than adequate punishment.The only thing I don't like now is the inconsistency in when to caution. For me it should be consistent, any player offence causing the kick to be retaken should be cautioned.
Don't mind either way as long as it's consistent. Right now, when to caution and when not to is all over the place.Why? Losing the goal or giving the other team a PK seems more than adequate punishment.
The cautions to GK for coming off the line is the dumbest thing IFAB has ever done. (Well, a candidate, anyway.) somehow they thought adding a caution would change the fact refs just didn’t call it. Of course it didn’t, if anything it made them less likely to call it. So then they had VAR micro analyze it, but kept the pointless caution. And instead of removing the caution, they do back flips to make it not an issue—moving to a warning first and then wiping cautions before KFTM. No keeper is thinking a whit about cautions in coming off the line—the keeper is only thinking that he loses the save if he comes off the line, as that is what matters. All law 14 cautions should be dropped as just plain silly.
Don't follow. Are you mixing things up here?What if the encroaching defender is a former team-mate of the kicker and points to tell the GK which way to dive, and the GK saves it? Without encroachment there's not much to be done about that. But if encroaching, could it count as clearly impacting on the kicker?
I get that you're probably trying to play devils advocate, but no.What if the encroaching defender is a former team-mate of the kicker and points to tell the GK which way to dive, and the GK saves it? Without encroachment there's not much to be done about that. But if encroaching, could it count as clearly impacting on the kicker?