Take your pick what we should call this:
(1) The "Wayne Rooney" Rule?
(2) The "Roy Keane" Rule?
(3) The "Alan Smith" Rule? (see the trend?)
(4) The "Lee Bowyer" Rule?
(5) The "Paul Dickov" Rule?
or the "Too Late for Craig Bellamy" Rule?
.....
FA's red card clampdown on foul-mouthed players
Denis Campbell
Sunday March 13, 2005
The Observer
Footballers who swear at referees will be shown a red card as part of a disciplinary crackdown.
Football authorities, increasingly concerned about the image of the sport, fear that the poor behaviour of professionals is influencing amateurs to follow their bad example. From next season, players who harass, intimidate or verbally abuse a match official when challenging a decision will be sent off.
The FA and the Premier League have acted after a spate of incidents - such as Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney unleashing a stream of expletives at referee Graham Poll in a game against Arsenal - led to a torrent of anti-football criticism, most notably in last week's Observer from John Dunford, general secretary of the Secondary Heads teaching union.
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Dunford suggested that live football should be banned on television before 9pm so that young people would not be influenced by seeing players snarling at referees. 'We don't want to see individuals, groups of players or managers in the referees' faces giving them abusive language, so from next season referees will apply the rules more strictly,' said a Football Association official.
'From August, anyone doing this will get a red card far quicker than ever. We won't tolerate this any more.'
There will not be an immediate clampdown because 'you simply can't change refereeing standards midway through a season'. Football managers and refereeing chiefs admit players have escaped punishment for behaving aggressively towards officials because the rules do not allow the showing of a yellow card as a first caution for the offence.
'Football's Law 12 says that if a referee decides someone is guilty of offensive, insulting or abusive language or gestures, the player receives a red card and referees have proved reluctant to use that power, in order not to spoil the game,' said a refereeing official.
FA chairman Geoff Thompson and chief executive Brian Barwick and Premier League officials are worried that the sport's image is being tarnished by such incidents, which are highlighted on television. They fear youngsters are castigating officials in the same vehement way and that referees are abandoning the sport in frustration at the decline in their authority.
The tougher stance will be agreed this summer by the Professional Game Match Officials, who control referees and refereeing standards in England. Managers will attend meetings about the clampdown and referees will visit clubs telling players what the change will mean.
But football is divided over the move. Gordon Taylor, the chief executive of the Professional Footballers' Association, the players' trade union, said that repeated coverage of a handful of incidents has given the public a distorted impression of how often such behaviour occurs.
'It's part of being a professional footballer that you accept the referee's decisions and keep your cool on the pitch,' he said. 'And haranguing or harassing the ref, or using insulting language, clearly isn't acceptable.
'But we should deal with this by changing the rules so a ref can hand out a yellow card for a first offence, establishing a two-yard exclusion zone around refs which players cannot enter or classing such behaviour as "ungentlemanly conduct", which is a yellow-card offence,' said Taylor.
John Scales, the former Liverpool, Tottenham and Wimbledon defender, said that action was 'long overdue' and using a sin bin for offenders - sending them off for 10 minutes to cool down - would be a better punishment.
'Giving a player a red card for this is too big a penalty,' Scales said. 'We don't want football to become a nanny state. Football is an emotive sport and there will always be players who get wound up. I'm a mild-mannered person off the pitch, but I lost it a few times during games in my career. 'Football should copy rugby's example and send a player who is abusive to a sin bin for five or 10 minutes. That would disadvantage his side, so his manager and team-mates would tell him not to behave like that again.'