I think it would only get tricky if there is SPA is handball. Deliberate handball is not a caution offence.View attachment 7257
I can't work out from this if it should be 2 cautions or 1 at the discretion of the referee.
Ok since you insist I will ask the question then. What if the handball stops a promising attack? Both the technically correct decision and what would you do if it's different please.I think it would only get tricky if there is SPA is handball. Deliberate handball is not a caution offence.
If the Handball stops a promising attack two caution able offences occur sequentially. So it would be 2 yellow cards, 1 for simulation and 1 for stopping a promising attack by handball.Ok since you insist I will ask the question then. What if the handball stops a promising attack? Both the technically correct decision and what would you do if it's different please.
"Cautionable" is one word James.If the Handball stops a promising attack two caution able offences occur sequentially. So it would be 2 yellow cards, 1 for simulation and 1 for stopping a promising attack by handball.
With that said, while correct in law, this would be a very tough sell. (Unless it's a very clear act of simulation including a short wait to see if the foul is given before then deciding to grab the ball).If the Handball stops a promising attack two caution able offences occur sequentially. So it would be 2 yellow cards, 1 for simulation and 1 for stopping a promising attack by handball.
Agreed. Two cautions would have to be clear simulation with clear SPA. Then I'd say it would be what the games expects and not too hard to sell with good communication and body language.With that said, while correct in law, this would be a very tough sell. (Unless it's a very clear act of simulation including a short wait to see if the foul is given before then deciding to grab the ball).
In a situation where a player falls on the ball and holds it I think I'd only ever give one caution max...