Showing posts with label Copa America. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Copa America. Show all posts

Friday, June 3, 2016

New IFAB rule changes will be implemented at Copa America Centenario


¿¡SE CUMPLIRA MI PREDICCION!? - COPA AMERICA 2016

The Copa America Centenario will be the first major competition to implement soccers latest round of rule changes.

The International Football Association Board (IFAB), a body made up of the four British football associations and FIFA that decides on changes to the laws of the game, made several amendments to the rules in May for the 2016-17 season. Most notably, IFABchanged the rule that mandatedan automatic red card for players who committed a foul in the penalty area that denied an obvious goalscoring opportunity.

The changes, which will officially take affect when the US and Colombia open the tournament on Friday at Levis Stadium (9:30 pm ET; FS1, Univision, UDN), will require a bit of an adjustment from referees, players, coaches and fans alike.

The Copa Amricas refereeing committee recently held a six-day boot camp for all tournament referees in Chicago to help ease that transition. The referees, who will all be stationed in Chicago for the duration of the tournament and will travel to match sites two days prior to games, underwent practical on-field exercises, classroom training sessions and physical testing at the Chicago camp, which concluded on Tuesday.

Weve got several days in which theyre doing practical sessions on the field with players where theyre practicing and doing situations that involve a lot of these law changes, CONCACAF director of refereeing Brian Hall, a member of the Copa Americas referee committee, told MLSsoccer.com over the phone on Tuesday. Then were doing theoretical sessions in the classroom where theyre watching video clips and theres four FIFA instructors here providing structure to them. So theyre doing theoretical classroom sessions in which theyre watching video clips and discussing all the law changes, so theres been a lot of focus on discussing these things.

Because of logistical difficulties and the tight timeline around the start of the tournament, representatives from the refereeing committee will not meet with teams participating in the Copa America regarding the rule changes. Hall said the committee has sent all 16 participating federations materials regarding the law changes and that representatives from every team will be briefed further on the changes at every match coordination meeting, held the day before each game.

Hall also discussed the tournaments policy to not hold extra time in the event of a tie at the end of regulation in the quarterfinals or semifinals, but to instead move directly to a penalty kick shootout. Hall said the policy, which has been used in past Copa America tournaments and is not an IFAB rule, was implemented because of the high number of games that will be held in a short timeframe for teams advancing at the tournament and the potential for high temperatures at many match venues.

A list of the major IFAB amendments is below:

Denial of an obvious goalscoring opportunity
  • Denying an obvious goalscoring opportunity (DOGSO) in the penalty area is no longer automatically a straight red card, unless the offense involves holding, pulling or pushing, if theres no attempt to play the ball or no possibility of making a challenge or if the offense would be punishable by a red card, no matter where it happened on the field (i.e., violent conduct).
  • The rule for players who commit a foul to deny an obvious goalscoring opportunity outside the box has not changed. Those offenses will still earn an automatic red card.
Offside rule adjustments
  • Hands and arms are no longer included when judging offside.
  • Restarts following offside decisions will be taken at the spot where the attacker is when the referee whistles for offside. For example, if a player is offside when the ball is played, but runs toward his own goal to receive the ball, the free kick to restart play will be taken where the attacker receives the ball, not where he started his run.
Other changes
  • The ball no longer has to move forward at a kickoff. It only needs to move for the game to start.
  • Players who are injured as a result of a red or yellow card foul do not need to leave the field after receiving treatment.
  • On penalty kick attempts, if a goalkeeper moves off his line prior to the ball being kicked, he will be issued an automatic yellow card. If the kick is missed when the goalkeeper moves off his line prior to the ball being kicked, the attempt will be retaken. The rule will apply in penalty kick shootouts, as well as in regular play.
  • If a foul occurs off the field of play, the game will be restarted with a free kick on the sideline or endline. If a defender fouls an attacker off the field but in between the goal and the edge of the penalty area, it will result in a penalty kick. Previously, all fouls that occurred off the field resulted in a drop ball.
  • Time taken for water breaks which are held if certain weather conditions are met prior to kickoff can now be officially added on at the end of a half.

Source: http://www.mlssoccer.com/post/2016/06/03/new-ifab-rule-changes-implemented-copa-america-centenario

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Copa America Centenario: The top 10 stars to watch


¿¡SE CUMPLIRA MI PREDICCION!? - COPA AMERICA 2016

Every major tournament brings the chance for players to put on a star show for their country, and Copa America Centenario has plenty of candidates capable of making headlines toward a deep run.

We"ve spotlighted 10 guys set to take the stage with roles that could or even should allow them to spark their teams into the knockout bracket, where any magical thing can happen.

#10 Salomon Rondon, Venezuela

Fresh off a solid debut season with West Bromwich Albion, the striker is after his Copa breakout. Rondon"s has hit twice in nine career tourney tilts, but did fire the lone goal winner against Colombia in last year"s tournament opener. Venezuela could use his best in the Group C dogfight.

#9 Paolo Guerrero, Peru

With Jefferson Farfan and Claudio Pizarro omitted from the final roster, Peru"s hopes of advancement rest on the streaky Flamengo striker. In last year"s Copa, he bagged a hat trick in their quarterfinal win and scored again as they took the third-place match. It"s becoming a thing; in 2011, he hit five times in another bronze finish for Peru.

#8 Edwin Cardona, Colombia

Stateside observers may have had a sneak preview of Cardona"s wares in the Liga MX final, where he starred in a losing effort for Rayados. Buoyed by a stellar first season in Mexico, Cardona seems primed to step up for his country, setting up camp above the opposition area to slip lead passes into every channel and fire the occasional bomb curler from behind a screen.

The Seattle Sounder continues to score for the USMNT, and is now up to 19 goals from 38 career major tournament games. With Jozy Altidore out, the Nats will look first to "Deuce" to provide offense in his pirating style. It will be Dempsey"s first Copa America.

Its probably no coincidence that the Philadelphia Unions rise in MLS has occurred in the same season that Blake was handed the No. 1 job. And in the first three months of the 2016 campaign, Blake has shown why hes earned comparisons with legendary keeper Oliver Kahn, courtesy of his national team coach. And with Costa Ricas Keylor Navas missing the tournament due to injury, Blake has a great opportunity to claim the goalkeeper spotlight all for himself if Jamaica can somehow replicate their Gold Cup run from last year.

#5 Alexis Sanchez, Chile

It was a bit of a trying season for the Arsenal ace, but he racked up seven goals in their last 10 games to finish with 17. With one Copa America title already under his belt, Sanchez has the speed and shiftiness to run wild at any major tournament.

#4 Javier Hernandez, Mexico

The ghost over your shoulder is back to his best. Fresh off netting a career-high 26 goals with Bayer Leverkusen, Chicharito is finally getting his first crack at a Copa America. Hernandez, who"s netted 13 times in 17 major tourney matches, needs four goals to become the all-time leading El Tri scorer.

#3 Hulk, Brazil

With Diego Costa, Roberto Firmino and Neymar all missing, Brazil may attempt to Hulk-smash their way to the final. Able to come at you from any angle on the front line, the 29-year-old scored 23 goals for Zenit St. Petersburg this season. He is also properly motivated, eager to wipe away memories of a scoreless World Cup 2014 with a memorable first Copa appearance.

#2 Luis Suarez, Uruguay

When you lead Barcelona with 59 goals, can score every way imaginable and occasionally sprinkle in some crazy behavior, no introduction is needed. What Suarez does require, however, is some time. He"ll travel to Copa carrying a hamstring injury and try to be ready for the knockouts. We shall see if Uruguay can buy him that time by escaping the group stage.

#1 Lionel Messi, Argentina

After piling up a "mere" 41 goals for Barcelona, the Argentina star is back to the chase for his first international winner"s medal since the 2008 Olympics. Messi, who has but one goal in his last 11 Copa America matches, has twice finished as a runner-up at this tournament and took home silver from World Cup 2014. How long can "close but no cigar" last for the diminutive dazzler?

Source: http://www.mlssoccer.com/post/2016/06/02/copa-america-centenario-top-10-stars-watch

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