FEW CHANGES MADE IN 2004 HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER RULES
A focus on risk minimization and
substitutions highlighted the January 25-26 meeting of the National Federation
of State High School Associations (NFHS) Soccer Rules Committee.
The most important change made
was a clarification from the 2003 rules meeting regarding goal post padding.
"Last year, we permitted goal post padding for the first time," said
Tim Flannery, NFHS assistant director and liaison to the NFHS Soccer Rules
Committee. "This year, we clarified that rule by adding the specifications
for the padding."
That clarification is of Rule
1-4-1, and states that the padding must be commercially manufactured and
properly secured. In addition, it will have to be white, with a maximum
thickness of one inch and a minimum height of 72 inches. No markings other than
a single manufacturer's identification or logo may appear on the goal post
padding. Since presently there is no clarification of the goal post padding
rule, this addition will be a factor in risk minimization.
Another major rule that deals
with risk minimization is Rule 4-1-1, which was changed to include that shinguards must be age- and size-appropriate. Previously,
the rule only required that they be age-appropriate. This addition will assist
officials in determining the appropriateness of shinguard
size, because many manufacturers currently size shinguards
according to standards such as youth, medium or adult.
A second major issue at this
year's meeting dealt with substitutions. A line in Rule 3-3-1(d)2 pertaining to
injured players on the field and their removal from the game was changed to
allow a team to make a replacement for an injured player whether that player
was specifically attended to on the field or after he or she was helped off the
field. Since there are often minor injuries in which play is stopped and the
player seeks to leave without needing to be attended to on the field (as in a
bleeding situation), this proposal would allow the coach to replace the injured
player or opt to play short.
Also along the lines of
substitution, an addition to Rule 3-3-3 states that the team not in possession
of the ball may substitute an unlimited number of players on a corner kick if
the team in possession of the ball is also substituting [provided the
substitutions have checked in per 3-4-1(d)]. This addition will increase both
effective playing time and participation because currently there is not a good
reason for disallowing substitutions for the defenders of a corner kick in
which the kicking team has already chosen to substitute. This rule change will
help avoid repetitive, unnecessary substitution stoppages.
"Allowing substitutes on
corner kicks is a big change," Flannery said. "It now puts us [NFHS]
in line with the NCAA."
A change to Rule 5-3-1(b) will
delete the phrase "and assists" to limit the responsibilities of the
referee to confirming goals for the scorekeeper when crediting players, rather
than both goals and assists, as the current rule states. This adjustment is appropriate
because the officiating crew should not be responsible for noting assists when
they do not play a significant role with respect to the rules of the game.
Also, a new rule has been added
with regard to assistant referee signals used in the diagonal system of
officiating. The rule states that if the assistant referee sees a foul or
misconduct, he or she will indicate this by holding the flag vertically until
acknowledged by the referee. Once acknowledged, the assistant referee will
wiggle the flag and point the flag in the direction where the free kick will
take place.
In addition, each year the
committee identifies certain aspects of the rules that aren't being changed,
but are being stressed in the Points of Emphasis. This year, the Points of
Emphasis focused on six central themes: sportsmanship, profanity, game
administration, ethics, team officiating and overall game safety.
"The committee continues to
stress the importance for players and coaches to model good sporting behavior
in all soccer contests," said Dr. Robert Lombardi, associate executive
director of the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association and chairman
of the NFHS Soccer Rules Committee. "This year, as we have for the past
several years, the committee continues to place emphasis on minimizing risk in
soccer."
Soccer is the fifth-most popular
sport for boys at the high school level with 345,156 participants, according to
the 2002-03 High School Athletics Participation Survey conducted by the NFHS.
It ranks seventh in terms of school sponsorship with 10,103. On the girls side,
it also is fifth in popularity with 301,450 participants in 9,299 schools.