Ruud
van Nistelrooy celebrates his goal against Italy
Tuesday 10 June 2008
UEFA supports Dutch goal decision
by Mark Chaplin from Basel
UEFA has emphasised that the goal scored by Netherlands striker Ruud van
Nistelrooy in last night's UEFA EURO 2008� match against Italy in Berne was
valid, and that referee Peter Fr�jdfeldt acted correctly in awarding it.
Not offside
UEFA General Secretary David Taylor was reacting to claims from some quarters
that Van Nistelrooy was standing in an offside position when he scored the first
of the Netherlands' goals in their 3-0 win. "I would like to take the
opportunity to explain and emphasise that the goal was correctly awarded by the
referee team," he said. "I think there's a lack of understanding among the
general football public, and I think it's understandable because this was an
unusual situation. The player was not offside, because, in addition to the
Italian goalkeeper, there was another Italian player in front of the goalscorer.
Even though that other Italian player at the time had actually fallen off the
pitch, his position was still relevant for the purposes of the offside law."
Still involved
The starting point, said Mr Taylor, is the Laws of the Game � Law 11 � which
deal with offside, whereby a player is in an offside position if he is nearer to
his opponents' goalline than both the ball and the second-last opponent. "There
need to be two defenders involved," the UEFA General Secretary said. "If you
think back to the situation, the first is the goalkeeper, and the second is the
defender who, because of his momentum, actually had left the field of play. But
this defender was still deemed to be part of the game. Therefore he is taken
into consideration as one of the last two opponents. As a result, Ruud van
Nistelrooy was not nearer to the opponents' goal than the second-last defender
and, therefore, could not be in an offside position.
Rare incident
"This is a widely-known interpretation of the offside law among referees that is
not generally known by the wider football public," he continued. "Incidents like
this are very unusual � although I'm informed that there was an incident like
this about a month ago in a Swiss Super League match between FC Sion and FC
Basel 1893. [It was] initially suggested that this [goal] was a mistake by the
referee in terms of the offside law � the commentator later apologised publicly,
as he didn't realise that this was the correct application of the law."
Law applied
Mr Taylor concluded: "So let's be clear � the referees' team applied the law in
the correct manner. If we did not have this interpretation of the player being
off the pitch then what could happen is that the defending team could use the
tactic of stepping off the pitch deliberately to play players offside, and that
clearly is unacceptable. The most simple and practical interpretation of the law
in this instance is the one that is adopted by referees throughout the world �
that is that unless you have permission from the referee to be off the pitch,
you are deemed to be on it and deemed to be part of the game. That is why the
Italian defender, even though his momentum had taken him off the pitch, was
still deemed to be part of the game, and therefore the attacking player put the
ball into the net, and it was a valid goal. The law in this place was applied
absolutely correctly."
Highlights here: http://www.sportizo.com/football/euro2008/italy-0-2-netherlands-highlights/