Soccer Referee Resources
Home
Ask a Question
Articles
Recent Questions
Search

You-Call-It
Previous You-Call-It's

VAR (Video Assistant Referee)

Q&A Quick Search
The Field of Play
The Ball
The Players
The Players Equipment
The Referee
The Other Match Officials
The Duration of the Match
The Start and Restart of Play
The Ball In and Out of Play
Determining the Outcome of a Match
Offside
Fouls and Misconduct
Free Kicks
Penalty kick
Throw In
Goal Kick
Corner Kick


Common Sense
Kicks - Penalty Mark
The Technical Area
The Fourth Official
Pre-Game
Fitness
Mechanics
Attitude and Control
League Specific
High School


Common Acronyms
Meet The Ref
Advertise
Contact AskTheRef
Help Wanted
About AskTheRef


Soccer Rules Changes 1580-2000


Panel Login

Question Number: 24734

Law 13 - Free Kicks 3/27/2011

Mark of McFarland, WI USA asks...

This question is a follow up to question 24724

Additional consideration to the previous scenario: If the ball touched the keeper or another defender and went into the goal, could the Referee determine Unsporting Behavior on Red player 'A'?
The defender may not have been able to tell if the referee could react by pulling his arm down quick enough upon Red player 'B' kicking the ball, and had they known for sure the ball did not move on the tap, they could have let the ball cross the goal-line untouched resulting in a goal kick. The only way a player can know for sure if the ball has been touched by a second player on an IFK is if the referee's arm is up or down; no referee can react that quickly on a bang-bang play.

This of course brings up the question: if a goal is scored when the referee 'forgot' to take his arm down, can the score be allowed?

Answer provided by Referee Joe McHugh

Hi Mark
The goal must stand if the ball is put into play or not from the original touch. The goalkeeper has to make a determination if the ball is in play or not based on what he sees or does not see. The referee cannot determine that nor the intention of the GK who could be trying to catch the ball to start a quick attack.
So there is no question of UB. If the ball goes into the goal directly then its a goal kick.



Read other questions answered by Referee Joe McHugh

View Referee Joe McHugh profile

Answer provided by Referee Michelle Maloney

Not sure why or how one would want to apply UB here - it is totally out of place because feinting is allowed on free kicks. This was not feinting, IMHO, just a misguided attempt to put the ball into play. Even if it was a feint, it's legal. The problem on such things is the attack never knows if the referee will consider it in play or not, and it is wholly the referee's decision based on observation - did the ball get kicked (kicking motion) with the foot and did it move (from here to there - small distance acceptable). Of course the same applies for the defense...

On any free kick against them, the defender and/or keeper have a choice to make. If they think the ball is live they must stop it from entering the goal. If they aren't sure, they'd better try - just in case.

The referee here goofed big time in the original question by thinking the ball had to travel its circumference to be in play. But whether the arm comes down or not does not matter here in the greater scheme of things. If the keeper is watching the referee's arm, she'll miss the ball! The only time it matters is when the referee fails to put the arm up to begin with - if the ball scores directly, then the kick would have to be retaken.



Read other questions answered by Referee Michelle Maloney

View Referee Michelle Maloney profile

Answer provided by Referee Keith Contarino

Unsporting behavior should not be a consideration here. All player A did was NOT put the ball into play. The keeper is almost always going to try to prevent a ball from entering his/her goal. Many coaches at lower levels instruct their players just to blast an IDFK at the opposing keeper figuring the keeper is likely to touch the ball before it goes into the net.

The keeper should be watching the ball not the referee's arm. When in doubt, virtually every keeper will attempt to stop a ball from scoring.



Read other questions answered by Referee Keith Contarino

View Referee Keith Contarino profile

Ask a Follow Up Question to Q# 24734
Read other Q & A regarding Law 13 - Free Kicks

Soccer Referee Extras

Did you Ask the Ref? Find your answer here.


Enter Question Number

If you received a response regarding a submitted question enter your question number above to find the answer




Offside Question?

Offside Explained by Chuck Fleischer & Richard Dawson, Former & Current Editor of AskTheRef

<>
This web site and the answers to these questions are not sanctioned by or affiliated with any governing body of soccer. The free opinions expressed on this site should not be considered official interpretations of the Laws of the Game and are merely opinions of AskTheRef and our panel members. If you need an official ruling you should contact your state or local representative through your club or league. On AskTheRef your questions are answered by a panel of licensed referees. See Meet The Ref for details about our panel members. While there is no charge for asking the questions, donation to maintain the site are welcomed! <>