Certainly not from the referee's position. The AR should have had a much better view of it but you can't see on the video whether he indicated or not.Very, very harsh.
Don't think it's possible to tell with any certainty whether or not he handled outside the area.
Why do you presume that? There's no evidence either way and while I would hope that he did, from his body language I think it's just as likely that he didn't.Presumably the referee has taken advice from his assistant
I watched the clip 5-6 times... focusing on the side angle... I'll be honest. It's not obvious to me that he's still handling the ball once it's fully outside the penalty area line.
In addition to that, the original (handling) play on the ball is entirely legal, as it's inside the PA, and that removes the DOGSO... so if he is handling outside, caution at _absolute_ most, and likely not even that... as the initial (legal) handling is that which denies possession...
While I agree that I don't think he's definitely handled it outside in this case, let's say he has for argument's sake. If by using his hands to control the ball inside the area he was unable not to handle it outside the area, then that makes the first part of the action irrelevant IMO. Take the keeper out of the equation, and it's DOGSO.Nope, still not arguable
The legal handling prevented the goal from being scored. The (potential) illegal handling was an after-effect, and when it occurred (if it occurred), the attacking player was already beyond him.
Except that it's not at all clear that "he was unable not to handle [the ball] outside the area." In fact, it's not even totally clear that he did handle outside the area, so it seems evident to me that it was/is absolutely possible to separate the handling into a legal component which is what prevented the opponent from having a goalscoring opportunity and an illegal component which then, in terms of DOGSO, becomes the irrelevant part.If by using his hands to control the ball inside the area he was unable not to handle it outside the area, then that makes the first part of the action irrelevant IMO.
While I agree that I don't think he's definitely handled it outside in this case, let's say he has for argument's sake. If by using his hands to control the ball inside the area he was unable not to handle it outside the area, then that makes the first part of the action irrelevant IMO. Take the keeper out of the equation, and it's DOGSO.
Yes, because he is choosing to hold the ball. The fact that he failed to release it in time is purely his own fault - he chose to hold the ball as he was leaving the area, as opposed to simply punching it away.Just to add to the hypotheticals that arise - even if the ball was in contact with his hands outside the penalty area, he was clearly making every attempt to release it before he crossed the line. As an offence of handling the ball has to be deliberate/intentional, assuming the initial handling was inside the area, is it an offence at all?
Caution for what?That's a very interesting point I hadn't thought of.
The handling that tales away the OGSO is indeed legal so I'd have to agree a caution is the most the keeper should receive