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"
Good fences make… good neighbors!!!"
The Wall
Andrew Castiglione
AYSO Section Referee
Founder of Ken Aston
Referee Society
"Something there that doesn't love a
wall..."
When a free kick is about to take place, very
often defenders will line up in a "wall." The spirit and letter of the
law do not allow the delay of the free kick. (Wall or defenders lining
up shoulder-to-shoulder, 2-3-4-5 players at a time, in line with
expected path of the free kick.) There is no stated prohibition in the
Laws about setting up a "wall." It is not mentioned.
Delaying the restart or failure to respect the
proper distance is a caution able, yellow card offense. Serious? How
many good free kick opportunities does a team get? How many chances like
that occur in a match?
Here a team has already been victimized by a
foul. Now, if denied proper distance - denied their freedom - you will
have let them be victimized again! This is misconduct, injustice!
Justice is required! So it is,
indeed, serious.
Serious enough, so a golden card may come out
of hiding. Sometimes a yellow card, shown early, will make defenders get
religion. (The offense is unsporting conduct, delay of game by failing
to respect the proper distance on a restart, or encroachment) Next time
they'll do the right thing: give 10.
The offended team, fouled though they were, may
want to take the free kick right away, immediately. As long as ball is
not moving; is at spot designated by referee, they may do so. Even if
defense is not the proper distance away-it is the kicking team's choice.
However, if their perceived shot, pass or
surprise, in a quickly taken kick goes for naught, they cannot ask to
have "10 yards." No proper distance, no second bite at the apple. They
cannot take it over. They had their chance, took their shot. No sweet
serendipity? So be it.
A free kick is awarded. Alertly, the referee,
in the meantime can tell the defense to get back; point to where they
have to go; use body language to encourage the surrender of proper
yardage. The Referee can remind the defense proactively. Warn that
encroachment is possible misconduct. Advise that misconduct has
consequences.
The referee does not need the kicking team to
ask him or her to take preventive measures. This will help management in
other free kicks situations, later in the game.
In most cases, the kicking team need not wait
for another signal from referee to take their free kick. They are
entitled to the quick restart before the defense can set up.
In the case, when the kicking team indicates a
plan to wait, or formally ask for proper distance, the referee may tell
them to please wait for that second signal. The ceremonial kick ensues.
Often the referee will hold up and point to the whistle- meaning 'wait
for my whistle', until the wall is set at the right distance.
The referees should not pace off the ten yards,
but know it from prior practice. Referees must have established a sense
of what 10 yards looks like, in their mind's eye. Then indicate with
sweep of their arm/hand where the wall should be.
The key: defenders must surrender proper
distance on their own. They have no rights. They have obligations: to
give up 10 yards; cede correct distance; allow all around acreage-360
degrees.
The referee has ways to help show defenders the
path of righteousness: firm voice, clear gesture (pointing, waving) or
being first person, 'brick' in wall- standing alongside where wall must
be. When a quick kick is not indicated, the referees should be careful
to face both defenders and attackers. Be sure the ball is not moved
closer, as the wall gathers form, at its legal distance.
If defenders deduce that they must give the
correct distance, which is good. If defenders know it, at the very first
free kick of the day, that is good. Then most often, this sets a
cooperative tone for the rest of the game. Perhaps a reluctantly
realistic defender attitude. That is better. |