FIFA Press Release following IFAB Meeting in Manchester March 3rd
Criteria set down for goal-line
technology experiments.
At its meeting today in Manchester, the International Football Association Board
(IFAB), the
guardian of the Laws of the Game, set down criteria for all future experiments
involving goal-line
technology.
Any proposed system seeking IFAB approval must meet the following four
principles:
-The technology should apply only to goal-line technology
-The system must be 100% accurate
-The indication of whether or not the ball has crossed the line must be
instantaneous between the
system and the referee
-The signal is communicated only to the match officials.
The Board also received a presentation from adidas/Cairos and the FA Premier
League on two
different systems.
Among the other items discussed were:
- It was decided that the next IFAB Sub-Committee would establish a common
protocol for dealing
with injured players.
- The Board stressed that any pitch-side monitors should not be visible from the
technical areas.
- FIFA raised the intentional use of elbows and presented the guidance to
referees ahead of the
2006 FIFA World Cup. It was accepted that these guidelines should be uniformly
applied.
- Artificial pitches should be green in colour. This will be integrated into the
FIFA Quality Concept.
- A protocol for referees' communication systems was established, specifying
that the system
should only link the match officials, that it is not broadcast and that it is
not recorded.
The Board approved changes to the wording of the Laws of the Game in the
following areas:
- Prohibiting any type of advertising on the ground within the technical area
- Any undershirts or undershorts must be the same main colour as the player's
kit
- The player's equipment must not carry any political, religious or personal
statements
- A reserve assistant referee may be appointed under competitions rules but
would only become
involved if one of the assistant referees is unable to continue
- A player may not celebrate a goal by covering their head or face by a mask or
similar item
Under Any Other Business, the following issues were discussed:
- A proposal by FIFA for two additional assistant referees was referred to the
IFAB Sub-Committee
for further study.
- The wearing of a hijab is already
covered by Law 4 on Players' Equipment.
The IFAB is composed of representatives from the football associations of
England, Scotland,
Wales and Northern Ireland as well as FIFA. The four British associations have
one vote apiece,
while FIFA, representing its 203 other members, has four votes, with any
proposal requiring a
three-quarter majority (i.e. six of the eight votes) to be approved.
Further information from:
FIFA Media Department
[email protected]