TomThompson
New Member
After making a judgement that an incident does not infringe the law (e.g. not to give a foul for a challenge) and so allowing play to continue, I often get players offering a brief opinion while the play continues. Having been a player in the lower leagues for many years I witnessed this quite often and it was usually ignored by the ref. I do the same. However there are cases when a player's comments persist, and while the content of what they are saying may relate to an incident, it may not be clear and obvious dissent. Such a case might be when a player wants to know how you came to your judgement. When such comments persist it can be distracting and if it is not challenged it may continue. In such cases I feel this warrants a break in play and a restart with a DFK against the offender. I feel this would be sanction enough, however I cannot find any room in the laws to do this without then cautioning the player for dissent. This would lead me into having to present the situation as dissent which would be hard to do.
Do other refs have a strategy within the law to deal with such in play "conversations" without resorting to dissent.
Thank you
Do other refs have a strategy within the law to deal with such in play "conversations" without resorting to dissent.
Thank you