callmemyref
Well-Known Member
What is referee's actions. And when does referee have to tell the player to leave the field of play?
Go Immediately? Stop play,?If the referee notices the bleeding wound, he is obliged to request that the player leaves FoP to have bleeding stopped
The referee must be sure that the bleeding has stopped/been controlled before allowing the player to return to FoP
Go Immediately? Stop play,?
what if I tell to step off and player doesn’t ? YC?Stop play if you need to. Mostly this comes to common sense. If there is a lot of blood and players together, you probably want to stop play. If it's a small amount of blood, and not contesting with another player, I'd handle at the next stoppage (or would stop if the GK gets the ball). Nothing prevents you from telling them to step off during play, but in most cases that is likely to be confusing IMO.
what if I tell to step off and player doesn’t ? YC?
My two cents: if the league is permitting play and not providing instructions to referees on this, then this is not a referee issue. it's something the team has to solve and you don't need to micro-manage the team's decisions. (We have plenty to do that is our responsibility.) Are R, you just need to tell the player he can't continue with blood on the shirt. The team needs to figure out the solution.At grassroots level, if there is blood on a kit, teams won’t probably have spares so I’ve seen people say, get a subs etc and remember the numbers.
How would people here approach that with covid and not sharing jerseys?
what would your approach be?Surely in this time of Blood Borne viruses, the referee need to take a common sense approach to blood on kit, or am I Yet again thinking outside of the box??????
why don't you tell us what you think the answer would be and then we can tell if you are right or wrong.But how to stop a game and what is a restart?
I'd stop a game and would restart with a dropped ball.why don't you tell us what you think the answer would be and then we can tell if you are right or wrong.
"Common sense" is often completely wrong.Surely in this time of Blood Borne viruses, the referee need to take a common sense approach to blood on kit, or am I Yet again thinking outside of the box??????