Ole Gunnar Solskjaer calls for clarity over controversial handball rulings after admitting ‘football has changed’

A number of contentious decisions have led to managers venting their frustrations about how referees are interpreting the handball rule

Arvind Sriram
Wednesday 30 September 2020 02:56 EDT
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Ole Gunnar Solskjaer says managers need more clarity on the Premier League's handball rule following a series of controversial decisions in the opening weeks of the season.

Tottenham Hotspur were denied a victory on Sunday after Newcastle United were awarded a penalty in stoppage time for handball by Eric Dier, who was facing in the opposite direction to the ball when he jumped.

Manchester United defender Victor Lindelof was also on the receiving end of a harsh penalty decision during their 3-1 defeat by Crystal Palace in their season-opener.

"I think football has changed," Solskjaer said. "There are no fans, it's a different game. Pre-season we were at different stages, the new handball rule; you never know what's going to happen.

"You can discuss it all day long but we need some clarity on what's a foul and what's a penalty. Now it looks like you can chip the ball into someone's hand, like what happened to us against Palace, and Victor got a penalty against him.

"Then the header against Tottenham, he's got no idea the ball hits him. You see the goal scored against West Brom at the end by Chelsea, is that not handball?

Much of the controversy focuses on handballs by players where the referee rules their arm or hand is an "unnatural position" or making the body bigger. The previous, established law relied on referees making a judgment as to whether a handball was intentional or not.

"We need to get that clarity. It's a whole spectrum of things that aren't normal. There have been so many changes and nuances to different rules," Solskjaer added.

Any move from the Premier League to change the handball law for next season would need to be submitted to international law-making body IFAB next month to be considered.

Reuters

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