And an automatic red card. Without Koscielny palming the ball over the line, that would have been miss of the decade from "The Ox"If a defender had prevented a goal that way it would have been a penalty.
massively fortunate but it wasn't a foul, handball has to be intentional and koscielney didn't have a clue where the ball was
the crime was burnleys defending, they let two go unmarked to the far post and didn't challenge the initial cross correctly
How do you judge whether a handball was deliberate? What if you just happened to have your arms stretched out in front of you and then misskick the ball into them? You didn't mean to handle it.
massively fortunate but it wasn't a foul, handball has to be intentional and koscielney didn't have a clue where the ball was
the crime was burnleys defending, they let two go unmarked to the far post and didn't challenge the initial cross correctly
Are there not plenty of examples where intent isn't the deciding factor? I mean there are plenty of handball's given against players who unintentionally handle the ball but have their arm's in unnatural positions. Koscielny didn't have his by his side, they were raised up by his head.
hundreds i'm sure, but are they examples
of the law being applied as written?
Not at all, but this is where the hand ball law becomes contentious. I always feel like there should be an element of common sense when deciding on these things, especially taking into account how much advantage is gained from it. Every case can be different and open to debate.
You're wrong.do you not think the original wording should be respected though?
"deliberately" is implicit
You're wrong.
You're currently being wrong in two threads simultaneously; pretty impressive.
do you not think the original wording should be respected though?
"deliberately" is implicit
Personally, no. I say that because I don't think the law can be so black and white. The referee cannot always know if a player has handled the ball by design or on accident, a clever player could manage it whilst looking innocent after all.
I mean should defenders be able to defend with their arms out? We could argue both sides, one saying that by doing so they are providing an obstacle to the path of the ball whilst on the other saying that they need their arms out to keep them balanced and agile.
I still believe that when a clear benefit has been gained (blocking a freekick at head height or guiding the ball into the net when it was going sky high) then a foul should be given.
i'm sure most agree with you on that
i'm not looking at this from what I think should be the case, i'm looking at how the law is written and how it applies in this instance
it makes me wonder, why after years of scrutiny on so many handball incidents, why have the lawmakers stuck so solidly with this wording