HomeNewsOpinionBlue Card: Football should crack down on abuse of referees

Blue Card: Football should crack down on abuse of referees

While the proposed 'blue card' after the familiar yellow and red card may create complications, the brow-beating of referees, especially by players during games but also by managers afterward, is a disfiguring feature of modern professional soccer

February 16, 2024 / 10:18 IST
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It can be argued that blue cards should be used only for dissent.

Soccer’s top rule-making body is backing away from its own plan to amend the laws of the sport to reduce cynical fouls and player misbehaviour toward referees. The International Football Association Board, or IFAB, has decided to postpone the introduction of a new “blue card” as part of trials for temporary dismissals akin to the penalty box in ice hockey and sin-bins in rugby union.

According to ESPN, there will be no announcements “until after the IFAB Annual General Meeting (AGM) on March 2, when all proposed trials and law changes are discussed before being approved for use from June 1.”

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IFAB was originally meant to announce the introduction of the new card on Friday. But the plan was leaked on Thursday, setting off howls of protest
from professional players, managers and fans. They argued a blue card, coming on top of the familiar yellow and red, would needlessly complicate the game. “It doesn't sound like a fantastic idea in the first moment,” said Liverpool FC manager Jurgen Klopp. “But ... I can’t remember  the last fantastic idea (which) came from [IFAB], if they ever had one.”

There is also resistance to the introduction of sin-bins, with or without blue cards, with critics arguing that any team left short-handed would simply pack their defense, slow down the game and resort to other time-wasting tactics while their player sat out.

If the board allows itself to be bullied into dropping the proposals altogether, it will have missed an opportunity to remove a blight on the sport. The brow-beating of referees, especially by players during games but also by managers afterward, is a disfiguring feature of modern professional soccer. (Klopp is himself a practiced exponent of this dark art.)