What you need to know about the game’s new law changes

You may not have heard about them, nor of the governing body who has introduced them, but the International Association Board (IFAB) have made 95 alterations to the 17 laws that govern football that will be in effect for the 2016/17 season.

Present in the national team's recent friendlies against Turkey, Australia and Portugal the new laws came into effect on the 1 June and will apply to all 72 clubs.

In a swift move to avoid the kind of controversy that shrouded 's clash against Yorkshire rivals in January, the IFAB have stipulated that a goal can stand if the referee has RESTARTED the match and an extra player is on the pitch.

As was the case when scored through Liam Cooper only for the goal to be disallowed because the substitution of Fernando Forestieri off for Lucas Joao had not been completed despite referee Anthony resuming the match, with United boss Steve left fuming as his side tried to launch a comeback on the 2-0 lead.

Elsewhere in the penalty box, some fouls that deny an attacker the chance at a goal-scoring opportunity will only warrant a YELLOW card. UNLESS, the offence is for handball, holding, pushing, making no attempt to play the ball or serious offences such as violent conduct and serious foul play, any of which remain a RED card.

The IFAB also reversed a rule they introduced last season by declaring that fouls which injure a player and earn the offender a yellow or red card will now see the injured player be allowed to be treated on the pitch rather than the mandatory assessment on the sidelines. This eradicates the numerical advantage that is often gifted to the offending team.

Other rule changes include:

  • A referee may send off a player even before the match has kicked-off (from the pitch inspection onwards)
  • If a ball rebounds off any match official it is in play, unless it completely passes over the boundary line
  • A player is NOT offside if he is stood on the halfway line; they must be in the opponents' half
  • If a goal is scored another attacker is in the goal, they can be penalised for offside

In a move widely commended by the professional football community, the IFAB also granted a two-year trial into video evidence to assistant match officials. Video technology will be used to determine the following cases: if a goal has been scored, red cards, penalties and mistaken identity.


IFAB presentation document on changes: Revision of the Laws of the game

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