@RefereeX I thought it would be worth doing a bit of analysis based on the PGMO guidance.
'Acts of holding that have clear material impact and/or are extreme non-footballing actions will be penalised.'
Material impact is defined as 'Opportunity for opponent to challenge for or play the ball' which I agree is not apparent in this case, so we focus on their second consideration 'extreme non-footballing action'.
Non-footballing action is defined as 'An action that is clearly not an attempt to challenge for or play the ball', which certainly applies in this case.
Extremeness is defined as 'Degree to which a holding action is a non-footballing act.'
Examples given applicable to this incident include
- 'Clear (extreme) non-footballing action with impact on the opponent’s movement'
- 'Not looking at the ball, only focusing on opponent and not challenging for the ball'
- 'Holding an opponent with both arms'
So it appears to me that PGMO officials might be overly focusing on 'material impact' and treating that as mandatory, when it actually isn't according to their own guidance.
You asked about alternative angles to show where the holding was so here's another one. If this is not an 'extreme non-footballing action' I don't know what is?
View attachment 8577