Sometimes, when you want to send a very serious offending player off the pitch for the rest of the game, some refs do this red card signal this way.... 1. Face the offender and then display a yellow card first for several seconds, and then; 2. Immediately display a red card later on--on that player, to send that person off.
Thank you so much. I’m 13 and reffing my first game tommorow morning and I’m so scared. I’m going to be reffing with a 16, and 21 year old and I’m scared I’m going to blank, or forget what signal to use. This helps a ton
What should we do in the event i don't see who touched the ball out of bounds? Specially if it was either a corner or goal kick? It happended to me this weekend. The played occured to fast and far that couldnt make who touched it last?
Quick tip for new Referees. As the center, make you practice TLC When a goal is scored. TLC means, Trail-AR, Lead AR, and Center. Reason for this is because sometimes someone might commit a foul and someone has to watch the field.
Make sure to get down to the goal line to signal for goal kicks and corner kicks. Remember that as an assistant referee, we stay in line with the second to last defender (including the goalkeeper), or the ball; whichever is closest to the goal line.
Offside, goal kicks, and corner kicks are all signaled with the right hand. Check the FIFA Laws of the Game for the proper signals to verify for certain.
One quick thing, He uses the Words “Assistant Referee” a lot. I am an Intermediate Referee and Hearing Assistant Referee bugs the heck out me. They are called ARs not Assistant Referees. Remember they are ARs
@@matteocarlini27 that's just your opinion and your preference. The full and proper term is Assistant Referee and AR is just a shortened term. They are the same thing.
I don’t think any officials on this field could be in position to see the point of contact (to the head) that requires the send off here. If there were a fourth official on the near side they would have good position. Otherwise this one is only for postgame analysis or VAR.
For a dropped ball restart, since the ball needs to touch a second player before entering either goal for a goal to count, my understanding is that if a player dribbles away with a dropped ball and scores a goal without the ball touching anyone, then the goal won't count. And the restart will be a goal kick. Is this correct?
From the camera angle it's a send off; nevertheless it's not clear the ref was (or any ref could be) in a position to answer the questions and arrive to the sendoff decision. Would a savvy and proactive trailing AR be needed to stop the restart and share with the ref the extent of the misconduct?
Where is the AR? I don't see one on the other side of the field where I'd expect them to be? Was this one of those games where the club/league plays some games with just a solo referee? Not a fan, especially for a game with an older age group on a full-side field!