That's not the argument you and others have made. It's been stated several times that, when the referee decides in their mind that they will stop play, that play stops at that exact instant.Made some corrections. I decided it is a foul, I raised the whistle but did not blow waiting to see if I can play advantage. It materialised and I awarded the goal. I never decided i am stopping play before the ball goes in (that is all i am willing to say or write in any report). A good referee is one who can improvise and use the full extent of what the law allows him to use to achieve a fair outcome.
If the referee has done so, they have decided that there is no advantage and they are not playing it.
You can spin it however you want, but if you have decided play must stop, how does it magically become not stopped because you didn't yet communicate this to others?
I would say it is within law to give a throw-in, but it's always a worse decision than the free kick. At best the team misses out on the better legal restart, at worst the foul is rewarded, defeating the purpose.You turn. In my example, if I decide to award a TI, would you say it is not in accordance to the LAWS of the game? And if it is not why not?