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Unwritten rules of football

Before kick-off

— Any player being filmed leaving a team bus must ensure that he is wearing headphones and carrying a small Louis Vuitton wash bag.

— Players who once represented the same club must stop and chat animatedly to each other in the tunnel as they wait to come out, even if they never really spoke to each other when they played together.

— On the day of a cup final, players must walk on to the pitch in their club suit approximately 1½ hours before kick-off and touch the turf to make sure it is just like all the other grass they play on every week. At least one player must pick some and throw it in the air to gauge the wind direction even though it is May, very still, and, therefore, very unlikely to affect anything.

Scoring

— If a player mishits a good chance, he must look down and carefully examine the pitch, maybe even treading back in some turf, so that everyone knows he got a bad bounce. If it is a televised game, he should continually blow mucus out of his nose as the camera tracks him back to his own half.

— When a player makes a great assist only to see a teammate tap the ball in, he must stand well away from the celebrating players and wait for them to come over and individually congratulate him.

Corners and throw-ins

— All throw-ins must be taken at least ten yards farther up the pitch than where the ball went out. The referee is allowed to tell the player off, but only when he has exceeded ten yards.

— All corner takers must push the corner flag to one side, regardless of whether it gets in the way. They must also raise a hand before taking the kick, irrelevant of where they intend to send the ball.

Free kicks

— Two or more players should always dispute who will take a free kick, even though they have spent an entire week on the training ground working out who will take them.

— When a player has conceded a free kick, he must pick up the ball and run several yards before dropping it behind him without looking. When a free kick is awarded and the referee places the ball in the required spot, it is essential to pick it up and place it down again at least six inches further forward, ideally with a backspin motion.

Offside

— When a player is judged offside and still shoots but doesn’t score, he must pretend he knew it was offside all along and didn’t really try to score at all. On the other hand, if he does score, he must act “outraged” and “robbed”.

— Any striker who is more than five yards offside must still either wag a finger or launch a tirade of expletives at the flag-bearing official.

Substitutions and injuries

— A player leaving the pitch on a stretcher must always be applauded, while players with equally serious injuries who are helped off by the physio must be booed.

— When water bottles are thrown on to the pitch while a teammate is receiving treatment, players must always squirt some out on to the grass before taking a sip.

— Players warming up along the touchline must always put their hands behind their backs and kick their heels up to touch them, even though they never do this in training or at any other time.

Goalkeepers

— Before kick-off, goalkeepers should always hang from the crossbar to check it does not have any cracks in it.

— Keepers must use the special adhesive power of saliva by spitting into their gloves as much as possible during games. They should also kick the soles of their boots against the post at least three times in each half.

— Goalkeepers should sprint into the opposition penalty box for injury-time corners, even if they have never connected with a header in their life.

Managers

— Any manager facing lower-league opposition in a cup game must describe the team he is facing as “well organised”.

— Assistant managers must be equipped with a blank piece of paper on which they can pretend to show substitutes the opposition’s tactical formation. In addition, assistants should shout and gesticulate in exactly the same way as the manager, only two seconds later.

Officials

— The referee must only blow for full time when the ball is in mid-air after a long goal kick.

— The fourth official must always check a substitute’s studs before he comes on, even though none of the studs of the players on the pitch were checked. It should be noted that no substitute in the history of football has ever been caught wearing “inappropriate studs” and no substitute has ever been refused access to the field of play because of a “stud check”.

— Fourth officials should always be of a smiling disposition when trying to calm infuriated managers back into the dugout.

Comments

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    LOL.... might have pipped AA for the longest ever post, i hope you copy and pasted it!
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    Was that just a spur of the moment thing?
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    LeftB

    have these issues being playing on your mind for long, whilst reading them i found my self agreeing with them all


    There is room on my shrinks couch for you if you need his number :-)
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    The referee blows when the ball is in a neutral part of the field of play not necessarily from a long goal kick.

    The players' studs will be checked as they come out of the changing room before they are led onto the field of play. It's mandatory the players' equipment is checked. Studs (nothing broken or dangerous), no jewellery (this includes plastic or cloth bracelets) and no wedding rings whatsoever and that any undergarment (both cycling shorts and under shirts) are the same colour as the predominant colour of the shirt/shorts.

    Being a 4th official isn't easy, trust me! You've got two managers going loopy at the slightest little thing, getting out of their prams and technical areas. It's just a way of calming the storms in a tea cup that tend to erupt....

    Still though, good post!!! However where would we be without our beloved game and all its intricacies?
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    not my doing found it on a music forum so it was a copy and paste job but while reading found myself agreeing
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    Excellent

    Spankie, not heard about the neutral area thing before. Makes sense but how do you define neutral?
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    When the ball is in the air from a goalkick as mentioned, when the defending team has it and they're not being put under pressure, when the goalkeeper has just caught it. I.e. when there's no chance of a goal being scored. Don't do it when a team 1-0 down is attacking and a decent chance develops or from a corner etc...just use an iota of common sense!!! ;o)
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    edited December 2008
    Fair enough. So what happens if the clock's up and there is a succession of corners - even once the ball is out of play you could argue that there is a decent chance of scoring once the next kick is taken and if it happens over and over, you could find yourself well over time.
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    Didn't one of our so called top refs once blow for time when the ball was in the air from a corner from which the attacking team 'scored'? Was it Clive 'the book' Thomas?.
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    [cite]Posted By: March51[/cite]Didn't one of our so called top refs once blow for time when the ball was in the air from a corner from which the attacking team 'scored'? Was it Clive 'the book' Thomas?.
    When I was refereeing in a youth tournament last summer, some jumped up little toad from a team made up of academy kids challenged me when I blew up for FT as he was timewasting while placing the ball for a corner, saying 'you have to let us take it and wait ten seconds'.

    WTF! I can't believe the rubbish these kids get taught at times
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    If there's a succession of corners I would allow up to time and communicate this to the players and blow in between corners whilst the ball is out of play. If anyone complains I would say time is up, end of. The only eventuality you can add time on for at the end of each half is a penalty kick.

    It was the 1978 World Cup group stages - Sweden v Brazil. It was just about time up with the score 1-1 and Brazil took an age to take the very last corner. Eventually it was swung in and headed into the net for what they thought was the winner. Welsh referee Clive Thomas blew the final whistle as the ball was in the air and the goal was disallowed.

    C_f_W - you'd be amazed how many innacuracies (and general rubbish) you get quoted during a season on the line on the contrib leagues....
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