Soccer-World Cup's new rules


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - New York/New Jersey Stadium Tour - New York/New Jersey Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S. - June 10, 2026 General view of FIFA World Cup 2026 branding inside the stadium REUTERS/Jeenah Moon

June 10 (Reuters) - There is ⁠a raft of tweaks to the rules at the World Cup, which FIFA has brought ⁠in weeks ahead of the tournament, designed in particular to reduce time-wasting and expand ‌the use of VAR.

"These amendments are aimed at combating discrimination, reducing time-wasting, improving the tempo of matches and enhancing the experience of players and fans," FIFA explained.

Here are more details:

*If a referee believes a player or goalkeeper is taking too long to ​take a goal kick, they will begin a visible five-second countdown ⁠using their hand. If the ball ⁠has not been put back into play before the countdown expires, a corner kick will be awarded ⁠to ‌the opposing team. The same procedure will apply to throw-ins.

*Any player who is being substituted will have 10 seconds to leave the field. If he fails to do so, the substitute ⁠must wait until the first stoppage in play occurring at least ​one minute later before entering. ‌The same rule applies to injured players. Anyone receiving treatment on the field must leave ⁠the pitch and can ​only return at least one minute after play has restarted.

*Players may not cover their mouths during confrontations with opponents, and if one does so deliberately, he may be sent off. The change follows controversies such as the dispute ⁠involving Gianluca Prestianni and Vinicius Junior.

In February, the Real Madrid ​forward accused his Benfica opponent of making racist remarks, but because the player's mouth was covered, no offence of racism could be proven.

*VAR can now review clearly unjustified second yellow cards, cases of mistaken identity, ⁠wrongly awarded corners and attacking fouls before free-kicks or corners that directly affect goals, penalties or disciplinary outcomes.

*A player who leaves the field in protest at a referee's decision may receive a red card, and team officials who encourage players to leave the field in protest against a referee's decision may also ​be sent off.

This follows the controversy at January's Africa Cup of Nations ⁠final where Senegal walked off in protest at a penalty awarded against them in the last minute against ​hosts Morocco.

Senegal returned after 14 minutes, saw Morocco miss the ‌spot kick and went on to win the match ​in extra time, only to be subsequently stripped of the title by the Confederation of African Football's disciplinary appeal board.

(Writing by Mark Gleeson in Cape Town; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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