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The Judges Association Ruled: The Gate of Lawful Nobles | Israel today

2020-02-25T11:54:12.079Z


The professional committee backed the noble gate's endorsement: "There is no reason for a suburb to stand close to players who were not part of the wall" Israeli football


The professional committee backed the controversial gate's approval: "There is no reason for a suburb to stand close to the non-Wall players."

  • A noble celebrates a legal gate

    Photo:

    Alan Shaver

The Judicial Union Professional Committee announced its decisions Tuesday regarding the 25th Cycle League events. As part of the committee's decisions, it was made clear that the first Maccabi Tel Aviv derby, which Omar noble occupied in the 35th minute, was a legal gateway despite claims that Saborite was close to the wall.

The commission's report states that under the constitution, when a free-throw is placed at least 3 players, all attacking players are required to be at least 1 meter from the wall. Hapoel's player wall consisted of 4 players and the two players of Maccabi (Glazer and Amador) stood Lawfully at least 1 meter from the wall, the two players of the left standing (Damari and Eisen) with a clear gap between them and the wall are not considered part of the wall, so there is no legal prohibition for an attacking player (suburban) to stand next to them.

In addition, the committee backed the decision by the VAR judge who recommended examining Shay Eisen's offense, which led to his removal on a red card because it was damaging the adversary market through exposed traffic jams and at the risk of adversary peace.

In the Betar Jerusalem victory over Hapoel Hadera, the committee decided that the judge was right when he sent a penalty kick to Hadera for a foul. The screen judge acted as expected, when, after examining the incident in the repeated gears, the judge's decision was noted.

In the match between Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Hapoel Kfar Saba, the screen judge was right when he recommended that the judge examine a Kfar Saba player's hand on the penalty area, which was not identified by the referee on the court. The judge acted as expected when, after examining the incident on the screen, the penalty kick was awarded to Beer Sheva.

In the match between Kiryat Shmona and Maccabi Netanya, the umpire was right when he upheld the referee's decision to penalize Kiryat Shmona, removing the Netanya player for denying a safe opportunity to score a goal, after deliberately pushing the ball from the goal line with his hand.

Source: israelhayom

All sports articles on 2020-02-25

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