It is very possible to unintentionally handle the ball but still deliberately handle the ball.
Offside restart is supposed to be where the attacker was when he interfered with an opponent/gained an advantage. It used to be (3-4 years ago) wherever the 2nd to last defender was. In practice, I begrudgingly split the baby and pick a spot somewhere in between. That is one of those laws that just won't be applied until the entire referee association finally decides: "hey everyone, call it the way it is supposed to be. It is just too much of a headache to deal with the olders to get them to restart the kick in the proper location 25 yards back than where they think it should go just because every referee is calling it different.Handling and offside restart location are the two laws I see consistently misapplied.
Offside restart is supposed to be where the attacker was when he interfered with an opponent/gained an advantage. It used to be (3-4 years ago) wherever the 2nd to last defender was. In practice, I begrudgingly split the baby and pick a spot somewhere in between. That is one of those laws that just won't be applied until the entire referee association finally decides: "hey everyone, call it the way it is supposed to be. It is just too much of a headache to deal with the olders to get them to restart the kick in the proper location 25 yards back than where they think it should go just because every referee is calling it different.
I will start trying it again in my games, my last experience with this was 2 years ago, I pointed to the spot where the IDFK should be, the defender gave me an exasperated look and took the kick from there ; but his teammate who was standing 15 yards away where he thought the offside restart should be taken received the pass with his hand to take the IDFK from the spot he thought the idfk should have been. I called handling going the other way. Ultimately I am not happy with how that situation turned out or how I handled it.Use your whistle and voice and tell them where the restart is. Why would you “pick a spot somewhere in between” when you could easily move them to the correct spot. I have no problem getting players to restart in the correct location. If all referees would just follow the LOTG and guidance from USSF, then there would be no problems. The referees that I see not changing to the newer guidance are the 40 year old and older refs that have 10+ years of experience. Most coaches and older youth players know the changes and rarely question my calls. I have even seen numerous teams that have set offside plays to take advantage of the newer Law 11 guidance.
I will start trying it again in my games, my last experience with this was 2 years ago, I pointed to the spot where the IDFK should be, the defender gave me an exasperated look and took the kick from there ; but his teammate who was standing 15 yards away where he thought the offside restart should be taken received the pass with his hand to take the IDFK from the spot he thought the idfk should have been. I called handling going the other way. Ultimately I am not happy with how that situation turned out or how I handled it.
This is also something that would need to be stressed in the pregame because otherwise you would have your AR stand their (with his/her flag still up, ugh) 15 yards ahead of where the kick should go. A proper pregame is not always a possibility. There are so many obstacles to calling it correctly and I guess I have been choosing the "choose your battles" approach.
From what I witnessed as a standby at Rob field for the Albion Cup (U9-U12), I found all the refs that don't call handling properly, who don't do offside properly, etc. I still think you are pretty inaccurate about the # of refs that call the game correctly. All the good refs you work with were doing the U13-U14's, but the majority at Robb field were not up to parr. Hell, a 9v9 game ended with 3 kids punching the crap out of a goalie and parents running on to the field.I completely agree with you on the pregame talk. I always include a quick refresher on Law 11 and where the AR should be when they raise the flag. I also tell the AR to be patient and wait for active involvement or interference with play. Most ARs I have been working with lately have been good at getting the location of the call correct. The trouble I have had recently has been during high school games running the dual system. Some refs only work HS and AYSO/Rec games and are fully versed on the changes to Law 11, so there is inconsistencies in when and where we make the call. It clearly frustrates the players. Some guys either just want to keep on doing it the old way or just do not listen during the pre-game.
From what I witnessed as a standby at Rob field for the Albion Cup (U9-U12), I found all the refs that don't call handling properly, who don't do offside properly, etc. I still think you are pretty inaccurate about the # of refs that call the game correctly. All the good refs you work with were doing the U13-U14's, but the majority at Robb field were not up to parr. Hell, a 9v9 game ended with 3 kids punching the crap out of a goalie and parents running on to the field.
My son played in the Albion Cup also and it was .......interesting. He was in the USSDA 05 bracket and the referees/tournament personnel at USD got the game time duration wrong. Our 1st game was 30 minute halves and the 2nd game was 25 minute halves. We were confused but in looking at the rules, the 1st game should of been 25. Pretty bad when you screw that up.
And when we played the host Albion...let’s just say that was frustrating.
From what I witnessed as a standby at Rob field for the Albion Cup (U9-U12), I found all the refs that don't call handling properly, who don't do offside properly, etc. I still think you are pretty inaccurate about the # of refs that call the game correctly. All the good refs you work with were doing the U13-U14's, but the majority at Robb field were not up to parr. Hell, a 9v9 game ended with 3 kids punching the crap out of a goalie and parents running on to the field.
My son played in the Albion Cup also and it was .......interesting. He was in the USSDA 05 bracket and the referees/tournament personnel at USD got the game time duration wrong. Our 1st game was 30 minute halves and the 2nd game was 25 minute halves. We were confused but in looking at the rules, the 1st game should of been 25. Pretty bad when you screw that up.
And when we played the host Albion...let’s just say that was frustrating.
I’d love to hear the banter on the sidelines if that was a youth match.
Would the referee have been threatened on the walk to the car?
Would parents shout “karma” at the other parents for some foul that wasn’t called earlier in the game?
Would the coach blame the ref?
Listening to Sirius FC, they stated that Clattenburg said that UEFA issued guidance after the MC - Schalke game that a ball hitting an elbow away from the body is a foul.IMO its not handling. There was no deliberate act to touch the ball. The arm was rotating away from the ball so no way its "hand to ball". Also there is no law that says that arm can't be away from body in penalty box, in fact just the opposite "the position of the hand does not necessarily mean that there is an offence". Regardless, if you watch the continuation of the defenders movement he was trying to bring his arm inside his body and away from the ball. (The still photo makes it look way worse than it was) Unlucky, yes. Handling, no ... in my opinion.
I'm sure there will be some rationalization about how the arm was in an unnatural position. There is no rule that says a ball hitting a hand in an unnatural position is a foul. The guidance for unnatural position is as a factor to consider (among others) as a indication that it may be deliberate, but not as a foul in and of itself. Hence why there is the guidance "the position of the hand does not necessarily mean that there is an offence".
Listening to Sirius FC, they stated that Clattenburg said that UEFA issued guidance after the MC - Schalke game that a ball hitting an elbow away from the body is a foul.
I'm sure there will be some rationalization about how the arm was in an unnatural position. There is no rule that says a ball hitting a hand in an unnatural position is a foul. The guidance for unnatural position is as a factor to consider (among others) as a indication that it may be deliberate, but not as a foul in and of itself. Hence why there is the guidance "the position of the hand does not necessarily mean that there is an offence".