Before I start, I Totally agree.Haha, no. Teams will try and persuade you that you're being unfair ("there's two teams here ref!"), but if one team is fouling and the other isn't, you're going to end up giving fouls and cards to just one team - it's not fair to imagine fouls for a team that's behaving just to try and even it up.
Makes sense. ThanksBefore I start, I Totally agree.
However, sometimes when it is all one sided, it might work to your advantage just to find one for the other side to take the heat off a little.
That said, there is No hard and fast, if one team is just kicking the other side they are getting nothing found.
Yes and no. Give a foul for nothing and you'll annoy the team that was previously fine with you, and one foul in isolation won't get the whining team off your back either.Before I start, I Totally agree.
However, sometimes when it is all one sided, it might work to your advantage just to find one for the other side to take the heat off a little.
That said, there is No hard and fast, if one team is just kicking the other side they are getting nothing found.
Not as outrageous as it sounds James.Before I start, I Totally agree.
However, sometimes when it is all one sided, it might work to your advantage just to find one for the other side to take the heat off a little.
That said, there is No hard and fast, if one team is just kicking the other side they are getting nothing found.
See @one 's post whom has answered this perfectly.Yes and no. Give a foul for nothing and you'll annoy the team that was previously fine with you, and one foul in isolation won't get the whining team off your back either.
A "softer" foul than you would normally give, sure. And if you're talking about a corner or FK into the box then it's usually easy to justify a foul if you really want to. But inventing one in open play where no one else can see why you've given it? That's just going to result in 22 player being angry with you rather than the 11 you had previously.
A retort I've used many times to the two teams jibe.Mentioned it before, but, as an AR, I was asked by a referee to keep a foul count once, so that he could counter any accusations of bias with the cold hard 'facts'.
Not sure I agree with that logic, as we've said previously, if one team is on top or clearly the better team, you would expect them to commit less fouls.
Before I start, I Totally agree.
However, sometimes when it is all one sided, it might work to your advantage just to find one for the other side to take the heat off a little.
That said, there is No hard and fast, if one team is just kicking the other side they are getting nothing found.
Indeed, easy to say/type, not so easy to do.My old L3 coach used to tell me to find soft fouls for a team losing heavily. I never worked out how to do it properly though.
Be VERY cautious with that. I’ve seen it backfire when a ref thought a game was over, and those little calls helped trigger a comeback.My old L3 coach used to tell me to find soft fouls for a team losing heavily. I never worked out how to do it properly though.
100% agree with this and I've always been inclined this wayMy old L3 coach used to tell me to find soft fouls for a team losing heavily. I never worked out how to do it properly though.
Is there some unwritten rule for match control I guess that you should try to call the same number of fouls against each team? What do you do if one team is just fouls more? Thanks
Thinking about this furtherMy old L3 coach used to tell me to find soft fouls for a team losing heavily. I never worked out how to do it properly though.
I've done similar, lower level game - 17/18 year olds school match.Thinking about this further
I haven't had my Report back yet, but I'll likely lose a mark for not Sin Binning a player on Saturday
Four nil down on 75 minutes, a losing player throws the ball down in frustration at a FT decision. It is the very first sign of dissent in the game. If the scores were close, I'd have sent the lad for a 10 minute sit down, guaranteed. But given the circumstances, I opted for a pubic dressing down with the Captain called in. There was zero further dissent in the game
It's similar to finding soft tackles for a losing team. I'm not really bothered how the observer viewed the incident. I know I'm not there to make friends, but my approach maintained full respect from both teams. In a sense, losing the point is like investing it, cos I'll get the point back (and maybe more) elsewhere in the report (although, sliding doors, this is difficult to know without playing out the rest of the game with the Sin Bin chosen)
Funny thing is, I knew I was likely to lose a mark at the time, but my principals seem more important to me... which is really quite peculiar