Earlier this year, Aleksander Ceferin, president of European football's governing body UEFA, admitted: «Nobody in the world understands when there's handball or not.»
Everton manager Sean Dyche certainly couldn't wrap his head around the decision to award Manchester City a second-half spot kick on Wednesday night. «The penalty, I have no clue,» Dyche shrugged after his side fell to a 3-1 loss despite taking the lead against the newly crowned world champions. «I don't think anyone does.»
Dyche revealed that the Premier League's managers agreed with Ceferin's damning appraisal of the handball law. «We had a Zoom call a couple of months ago,» the Everton boss growled, «all of the managers said it is a farce and we don't know why they are giving penalties.»
Here's a look at how the referee came to this particular decision at Goodison Park.
Penalty or no penalty?<a href=«https://twitter.com/hashtag/PLonPrime?src=hash&ref_src=» https:>#PLonPrime
<a href=«https://twitter.com/hashtag/EVEMCI?src=hash&ref_src=» https:>#EVEMCI pic.twitter.com/3ctxYEdZFWNathan Ake, forward for a City set piece, pivoted to unleash a shot from within the six-yard box shortly after the hour mark. As is customary in any Dyche team, multiple Everton players hauled their bodies in front of the ball. Amadou Onana was first on the scene but blocked Ake's effort with his right arm.
Dyche's argument against the decision revolved around intent. «Is that deliberate? Of course not,» Dyche asked and answered. «These players hit [the ball] so fast and so hard, I don't know where they are meant to put their arms when slinging yourself.»
Law 12 in the FA handbook states that a handball offence has been committed «if a player deliberately touches the ball with their
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