I think the ball is actually just still in play on the second oneNot for me.
The more curious one is the next clip, Vancouver.
How many people are giving a yellow and restarting with a red throw in?
That perspective intrigues me--the defender clips his foot from behind. Seems a pretty clear foul to me.I just think not giving the foul at all and considering that contact trifling would be the best call.
that's how i saw it.I'm with @Ref X on this - it feels like a soft yellow because it's a really soft foul decision. But when you separate out the foul and SPA questions, it's a clear SPA: He has broken through the midfield and would be running at the defence diagonally towards the goal if it wasn't for the contact from players who are behind him.
I just think not giving the foul at all and considering that contact trifling would be the best call.
I'm not totally convinced I see that. And if I do, I think you can also make a case the attacker effectively initiates it by slowing down.That perspective intrigues me--the defender clips his foot from behind. Seems a pretty clear foul to me.
The attacker isn’t required to maintain speed. If he does slow down, it doesn’t remove the foul. The defender was trying to crowd him. I still see it as a foul.I'm not totally convinced I see that. And if I do, I think you can also make a case the attacker effectively initiates it by slowing down.
A promising attack is very much a subjective call. I am ok with you interpreting that way. But I don't agree with it. For me it doesn't meet the numbers (defenders) consideration if you combine it with distance.Just to circle around here on the evolution on my own thinking...
1. Was this even a foul?
Honestly, I could easily see this being a play on. If there's contact, it's super minimal, enough that I'm having to really search hard for it.
If it is deemed a foul, onward...
2. Was it SPA?
I think the yellow for SPA is appropriate!
The 3 considerations for SPA are SSO (Speed, Space, Options).
If a referee decided the closest defender meant this play didn't meet the threshold for Space, I could absolutely buy that argument. But I can personally easily see how this meets SSO requirements.
- Speed: the attacker is running at pace when the foul happens.
- Space: the attacker is also running in space. Sure, there's another defender close to him but the attack continues if this foul doesn't happen.
- Options: the attacker has at least 2 options to play the ball that both make a slightly promising attack even more promising. See screenshot below. Maybe you disagree, @RefRyanAus?
I didn't say he's required to maintain speed. But I can flag up a bunch of examples where an attacker deliberately moving their path in order to make contact with a defender has resulted in penalties being overturned/non-penalties being supported by VAR.
I don't see "crowding" on the list of DFK offences in my LOTG? Absent a clear trip, this is just normal footballing contact.
@one I accept this interpretation.For me had he passed it to one of the options and then if one of those two player were fouled then that would have been spa. As it is now, for me it is a "good" attack but not a "promising" one.
Totally agreed. That's one thing we all have to keep in mind when watching video clips of one moment of the game. We're not taking the whole game into account which really is needed to determine how a subjective call is made in a singular moment. I like your thinking here.For the foul, it is on the lower end of the threshold. If this is given them I would like to see the same threshold maintained in the game within the same context. And it has to be consistent within the league also. I don't see this being given in EPL very often.