ronk wrote:I've never really understood why this isn't something that's seen as automatic and obvious. If an offence happens partly in the box and partly out of it, it's fully a penalty. Why should a ref give the person who committed the foul the benefit of the doubt, or a favourable interpretation?
I'd have thought the opposite. The starting point of a foul is when it occurs, not the end point. When the referee blows, it is in reference to the initiation of the foul, not the end. For example, if 2 players start scrapping, he doesn't wait until its finished to blow and send them off. Likewise, a free kick is given where a tackle is made (ie the start of a foul), not where the player lands (the end of the foul), and throw-ins are taken where a ball initially goes out of play, not where it lands.
The ideal rule would be for referees to award a free kick/penalty wherever the initial contact is made, in my opinion. It just makes sense to me. However, going on the current rules, it was a penalty.
"Ferguson. Žvaka kurac."
(Ferguson. Chewing-gum cock.)
Old man in a bar in rural Bosnia.