Talk:Laws of the Game (association football)

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New Page Added[edit]

I've created a new page (The Ball In and Out of Play), so that we come closer to completing the 'Current Laws of the Game' section of this page. Drumnbach 20:51, 27 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Sources[edit]

Note: My source for the original Laws of December 1863 are from a book published in 1953 called "The History of the Football Association". A large number of websites (and some books) list only 13 original laws, with slightly different wording. I am currently waiting for the FA to confirm the laws. Mintguy (T) 08:29, 3 Apr 2004 (UTC)



An email exchange regarding the above discrepency between the original LOTG as pubished in a number of books and on a many other websites and as listed on this page.

Hi XXXXXX

Thank you very much indeed for drawing our attention to this.

There seem to be a number of different versions of these rules - ours
was taken from "The Early Years"  published by the AFS in 1983.

In the FIFA library is a different version which is titled
"A facsimile of the 14 laws of the game  established in 1863"
and is this is in the FIFA Centenial Book. 

We are going to do some further research to ascertain the correct
version and I will get back to you.

Best regards

MXXX BXXXX
AFS 
18 St Philip Square
London
SW8 3RS
United Kingdom

Tel: + 44 (0)20 7720 XXXX
Fax: +44 (0)20 7627 XXXX
Email: ****@11v11.com
Website: http://www.11v11.co.uk

The information in this message is confidential information
and may also be legally privileged.  It is intended only for
the individual or entity named above.  If you are not the
intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any use, 
review, dissemination, distribution or copying of this message, 
or any attachments to the message, is strictly prohibited. 
If you have received this document in error, please immediately
notify us by telephone and delete the original message.
Thank you.

-----Original Message-----
From: XXXXXX XXXX [1]
Sent: 12 May 2005 10:11
To: enquiries@11v11.com
Subject: Error on site.


According to 'The History of the Football Association' pub 1954
the Laws of the Game you give for 1863 appear to be incorrect. 
There are some slight differences in wording, but the most 
significant difference is that you list 13 laws and the book
gives 14 laws. 

Regards

XXXXXX XXXX

--- Jooler 09:55, 14 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]


Melvyn Bragg's new ITV Programme has The First Rule Book of the Football Association (1863) as one of the 12 most influential UK books. On the programme last night he showed what appeared to be a copy of the original, with 13 laws. The FA website confirms that 14 laws were written. I think Bragg's copy had rule 13 missing--luke 17:54, 17 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

14 rules were posted to news:rec.sport.soccer on Friday February 26th 1993--luke 06:04, 18 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Do you have a link to the discussion on Google groups? 11v11.co.uk did not reply any further after the email above and the still show 13 rules on their site. Jooler 13:48, 25 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This is my recent request for more info on news:rec.sport.soccer. Perhaps using the word "football" more would have helped :)
news message on Original rules of soccer
The last link I gave in that news message will take you to the Friday Feb 26 7:27pm 1993 posting from Richard Coon mentioned earlier. The wording given in his posting must be from pre-December 1863 (eg see the planet-rugby link about rules IX and X). Since I don't have Geoffry Green's book, I'm still trying to track down the origin of the AFS wording (which, with one typo corrected, is letter for letter the same as the wording which Lord Bragg gives.)--luke 06:17, 8 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The Geoffrey Green book also lists a draft set of rules from 24 Novermber 1863 (before the Cambridge rules were brought to the table and hacking and carrying were declared illegal) - which is still 14 rules. Jooler 00:39, 10 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Okay The Code War- ISBN 1874427658 page 18 lists the same 14 draft (pre-Cambridge influence) rules, it then goes on to say that the Association published the later (post-Cambridge influence) draft rules as a set of 13 rules. Jooler 01:04, 10 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Hi - What's the wording of the post-Cambridge set given by Graham Williams? Same as given by the AFS? On what date were they published and who was involved? Thnx in advance--luke 00:23, 11 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
He doesn't give them he just says there were 13. Jooler 02:08, 16 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Here is the rec.sport.soccer link with 14 laws from 1993. Jooler 00:43, 17 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the info. In fact these earlier November laws are the ones in the FIFA Centennial Book referred to above in the letter from Mark from the AFS, not the final version published in December at a cost of one shilling. Laws IX and X - (see The schism between the Football Association and Rugby Football) allowing hacking and running with the ball are there in the facsimile on page 20, and I think the explanation of terms shown above the laws is also from November.
Now rule 13 of the original 14 is clearly no phantom, but the notion that there were originally only 13 rules has clearly some momentum behind it, since it is repeated in The Code War - as well as by Lord Bragg and the AFS. It goes back at least to 1899. In the book Football by Montague Shearman and others in The Badmington Library series published by Longmans, Green, and Co. at page 89:-
At the meeting on Dec 8, 1863, a code of rules was drawn up which it will be interesting to recapitulate here, as showing how comparatively few changes have been made in the laws of the game since the formation of the Association, in proportion to the worldwide scientific development of the game itself. They were as follows...
Thirteen laws are then given, being substantially the same as the ones now on the AFS website
No-one has yet sent me a scan of the December laws as printed, though Geoffry Green is clearly writing with access to the minute book of the FA. I don't know if even the FA have a print copy, but if they do it would be nice to put a scan up on their website in time for the world cup.--luke 14:13, 21 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The Geoffrey Green book says that the LOTG were first published in "Bell's Life" (actually "Bell's Life in London and Sporting Chronicle"). It might be possible to obtain a facsimile of the correct edition from The British Library. See http://www.bl.uk/catalogues/newspapers/record.ASP?lngMTitle=12157. Jooler 12:07, 22 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Cool - I might be able to get there in 3 weeks. Do you know if they do copies, and could there be copyright questions if we are to put this online--luke 17:27, 22 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm writing this with a few scans of Bell's Life in London for 1863 now on my pc :) Reading their detailed reports about the new Football Association meetings at the Freemasons' Tavern, it seems that Lord Bragg and the AFS may have it about right after all. I spotted only some tiny inaccuracies on the AFS website compared to the contemporary report published on December 5th (eg for Law 12, 'pretext' should read 'pretence')

The meeting then proceeded to settle the proposed laws, which will have to be confirmed at the next meeting [which was to be on December 8th], and we give them now in extenso [in full detail] as they will be submitted verb. et lit. [verbatim et literatim =exact copy, word for word] for adoption, so that any non-contents [objectors] may not be able to say they did not know, and there are several very important differences from the code published last week.

The following week it is reported that the laws were made as given in this journal last week Later it is reported Mr Lillywhite having been called in, stated that he should wish to publish the rules and laws under the authority of the association, and to have pemission to print them "by authority." With regard to the charge, he considered that in a small pocket form a shilling would be the price, and a larger size, in a roller form, for club rooms could be nicely got up for 1s 6d

I wonder whether any printed copies still exist, and whether the minute book of the FA tallies with Bell's Life's detailed reports--luke 03:17, 25 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm amazed you got copies of Bells life. how did you do it? Perhaps you could upload them to the Wikimedia commons. Jooler 16:39, 25 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
They were sent to me. I'll need to contact the sender to ascertain the copyright status, and also whether he is happy for them to be put online. If the FA minute book may possibly be scrutinised in the near future, hopefully we could deduce more exactly what happened all those years ago. Perhaps the reports are based on the minutes--luke 17:58, 25 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
--------------------
I've posted a couple of messages on news:rec.sport.soccer to try and locate a print of the laws. It would be nice to have access to a scan. If nothing is forthcoming I'll re-write some of the article to include what we've found out so far--luke 02:57, 28 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Again The British Library will probably have a copy of the first publication. Jooler 09:28, 28 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think perhaps the various rules should be put in an article called the evolution of the laws of association football or some such. Jooler 09:30, 28 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I couldn't write that. I'll just add what I know--luke 06:04, 30 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Since the IFAB minutes from 1886 are available on the web in pdf, I'll suggest that maybe the FA could make their minute book available. Still nothing back yet on the printed laws--luke 05:09, 1 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I would hazzard a guess that those PDFs are taken from a DVD published by FIFA as referenced at the bottom of this page - http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/corshamref/sub/offhist.htm. Have you tried emailing the FA or FIFA regarding this matter? Jooler 00:54, 2 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well well - This has just been published - http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1851243755/qid%3D1149210555/203-8223528-0491144. Jooler 01:10, 2 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

wow - ur right on the mark for sure. The FA have suggested to me that putting the minute book (I asked for the years 1863 to 1886) on the web is not a high priority. They never told me about this impending book And Sky may have filmed a piece about the rules - it now looks as if it was partly as publicity for the book and the FA. Looking at the synopsis on Amazon:
..Published to coincide with the World Cup in June 2006, this unassuming little book sets out the thirteen original rules as first written down by a group of frustrated former public school men at the Freemason's Tavern in Lincoln's Inn Fields. Every rule is accompanied by images from the hand-written manuscript preserved at The FA..
and then
..As Sir Bobby Charlton explains in the foreword, the fourteen original rules embody the essence of the game..
Also
The book is officially endorsed by The FA and supported by a publicity initiative backed by The FA
lol - What is going on I wonder, and I also still wonder any printed copies of the laws are still in existence - since the synopsis seems noticeably silent about that. I guess only a print will resolve for certain whether a player shouldn't take the ball from the ground under any 'pretence' whatever, or any 'pretext' whatever :)
May I ask, will you be buying a copy? TIA--luke 05:12, 2 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I wasn't intending to buy a copy. However this has now got EVEN MORE confusing! I sent an email to the person who runs the website on http://www.corshamref.net/ because on that site they use the Geoffrey Green book as a reference and in reply I got a scan of the 14 laws listed in the FIFA Centenial Book. (presumablty the same book mentioned by the AFS above) - BUT what the scan shows is the the draft rules BEFORE hacking was disallowed. So perhaps the FIFA book has it wrong and so when people quote those 14 laws they are in error. But it still begs the question where do the 14 laws described in Green's book fit into it? I'm now starting to think that maybe Green mis-interpreted the FA minute book as well. We really need to get a good contact in th FA to clear this up. Jooler 00:53, 3 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
My contact is David Barber, who I was told by the Football Museum is the FA's archivist and historian-in-residence. He's aware of this discussion, and it was he who told me that putting the FA minute book on the web isn't a high priority.
And about the facsimile in the FIFA Book on page 20, I did already refer to that (see above) as being the November laws - my guess is that the AFS in fact knew this when they mentioned the facsimile in their message to you, and that they've always been aware about problems in the FA's 1953 official history in respect of this matter - assuming that Mr Lillywhite's printed laws didn't differ from those put to the public in Bell's Life in December. I'm guessing a bit, but these problems may be because the FA didn't allow the author proper access to its archives. That guess is partly based on the fact that a 'go-between' is IIRC mentioned in the preface. David Barber should perhaps be in a better position to clarify this, and maybe also Geoffrey Green or his family have notes of his work.
There is more that I could add but I'll leave it at that for now, and I'll again point David Barber to this discussion hoping that he can help to clear this up. I started out believing that Lord Bragg had it wrong, but it seems he may be right and the confusion goes back to 1953. After all, it seems to have been reported correctly in 1899 :)--luke 06:23, 3 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I had an email exchange with David Barber a few years ago about a different matter. Okay, sorry I had missed that about the FIFA book. So does the FIFA book make it clear that these laws were BEFORE hacking was removed from the game? I will try to get hold of a copy of the FA 1863 LOTG book today it's quite cheap. Just to clarify and a question of yours that I didn't answer - The Code War lists the 14 pre-hacking laws the same as the AFS and the Green book. Jooler 09:10, 3 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hey, Thanks for all your help. I so envy you having a copy of the Official History, even if there may be a few errors. To answer your question..no the FIFA centennial book doesn't make this clear. Also, as you'll see the laws are in printed form, and the centennial book says they're from the FIFA library (as the AFS mentioned in their message to you.) My deduction is that FIFA don't have the December final version of the Association laws. If this final version is (like Bell's Life says it is) the same as the one in their precisely worded December 5th published draft, then it differs in several respects from that in appendix four - eg particularly the absence of "A player shall be allowed to throw the ball or pass it to another if he made a fair catch or catches the ball on the first bounce" - thus the first association football games would be significantly less like rugby football than the F.A.'s official history suggests.--luke 03:01, 5 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Try Ebay - The 1953 Book was republished as part of a set of four, see here. This was pointed out to me by Julian Carosi of www.corshamref.net. He tells me - In accordance with 'Association Football and The Men Who Made It' (1906) Vol. 1 pages 36-39 it seems as though (following the set up of The FA in October 1863) there were 3 meetings culminating on the 24 Nov meeting were a fresh set of rules were submitted. These were eventually agreed at the 1 Dec meeting with minor changes as described in the Geoffrey Green book. As far as I know, it was always 14 original rules. I don't know where the idea of 13 comes from. I have ordered the The Rules of Association Football, 1863: The First FA Rule book from Amazon as a matter of interest." - so hopefully he might resolve it for us. The new publication wasn't in the shops when I looked on Saturday. 03:11, 5 June 2006 (UTC)

The confusion - summary for newcommers[edit]

When this Wikipedia article was created - Mintguy put up 14 laws as the "original fourteen laws of the game" - these were transcribed from "The History of the Football Association"; Geoffrey Green; Naldrett Press; (1953) - pages 36-38 Appendix 4. According to that book these 14 laws were those agreed by the Football Association in December 1863, AFTER the Cambridge Rules had been put on the table (call them post-Cambridge). They are a revision of the another set of 14 laws that were drafted on 24 November 1863, those DRAFT laws (call them pre-Cambridge) contain laws IX and X which allow hacking (kicking a player in the shins) and carrying the ball and are shown on pages 34-35 of that book. The post-Cambridge laws removed these priviledges and set the Association laws onto the path towards the game we know today, rather than towards a carrying Rugby style game. Aside from the two significant law changes, there are some other subtle differences in the wording of the other laws in the Geoffrey Green pre-Cambridge and post-Cambridge laws.

The problem is that other sources give 13 laws as the "original laws of the game". In some cases where 14 laws are mentioned (as in the FIFA centenial book) they are referring to the pre-Cambridge laws (perhaps by mistake).

The main question is - IF, as the recent Lord Bragg and FA/Bodleian Library publications seem to suggest, there were 13 laws in the first official publication of the LOTG, then where did Geoffrey Green's post-Cambridge 14 LOTG come from? 01:39, 5 June 2006 (UTC)

FA book[edit]

Okay I've got the FA book, and of course it lists only 13 laws. Bobby Charlton's preface also says 13 laws. It looks like that are substantially as currently suggested on this page, with the exception that law 9 definitely says "carry the ball" rather than "run with the ball", there appears to be a couple of other transcription errors as well. So The Times and perhaps even Lord Bragg got it wrong here! - I have also just obtained the 4 Volume set of books on Association Football published by Caxton Press in 1959/60 edited by Geoffrey Green with lots of contributors. The section on the original LOTG was written by a Mr J.R. Witty. The layout is similar to the way the laws are laid out in the 1953 Green book. Green divided the page into a left and and right hand column and put the 1863 Cambridge laws on the left hand side an their equivalent in the FA laws on the right. He thus had the FA laws in an ecentric (1,2,3,6,5,7,4,9,11,12,10,8,13,14) order to match the equivilant Cambridge rule. The Witty pages also split the page into two columns and list the 14 FA Draft laws of November 1863, as numbered, in the left hand column and show the changes from this in the right hand column, sometimes the right hand column simply says "accepted as drafted". The left hand side does not show laws 8 and 9. 9 is understandable because that was one of the laws stricken, but 8 appears to be a mistake, the new FA book and Green include law 8. The other significant thing is that the right hand column is not numbered. So Law 8 (either version) is completely mising' from Witty's pages, both right and left, but as this was the same as the draft laws, he would have just written ""accepted as drafted" anyway. In other respects he agrees with Green's version (specifically law 5 includes the words "where it left the ground in a direction at right angles with the boundary line, and it shall not be in play until it has touched the ground.", however Green's laws 9,10,11,12 are displayed in the order 9,11,12,10 and MOST IMPORTANTLY Green's law 13 is enitirely absent. So barring the additional words on law 5 and what we might take as a few transcription errors, Witty's pages substantially agree with the new FA book . I think that both Green and Witty were probably working with source material that was not entirely clear and that some errors crept into their works (who was going to copy-edit stuff like this?). Green's law 13 was in the original draft laws (except the word bounce is substitued for bound) I suspect he put it in his book as a finalised law in error. At the end of the day we have to accept that the first laws, whatever these books say, must be defined as whatever the FA published at the time by Lillywhite's, and that players up and down the country would have played by. We have to assume that the new FA book has got it right on this one. The new book includes a hand written version on the left of the page and a modern printed version on the right. So I think we have to delete Green's laws from this page, put up the laws EXACTLY as displayed in the FA book, add a note that it appears that some authors have used incorrect transcriptions and finally add another note to say that this page has inadvertantly been displaying the laws incorrectly because of an apparent error in the source material. Jooler 12:52, 7 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I think that it would help if I emailed some scans, or put them up on some website for you to pick up somewhere. Is your Wikiemail enabled? I have to admit that mine isn't. Jooler 12:56, 7 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Just looking through the 1953 Green book again. One of the plates is a photo of the FA minute book open at a table on a page that is clearly first page of the DRAFT laws of November 1863. It looks very much like it it this page that the FIFA facsimile is taken from. However the caption reads "The Football Association Laws as accepted in December 1863, with references to such terms as 'fair catch' and 'making a mark'". This open page from the minute book is a typed or printed page, whilst the laws shown in th new FA book are hand-written. I suspect this is what happened. At the end of the November meeting that got someone to print up the draft laws. At the next meeting the Cambridge laws were brought to the table and the draft laws were re-debated and amended, but they were not printed up in the minute book in the same way that the draft laws were. Hence Green and others had some trouble working out from the minute book what was and what was not agreed. Mind you would have thouht that they would have actually looked at the original publication produced by Lillywhite's. There you go. Jooler 23:29, 7 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
hey - a lot of stuff to think about for sure. If you look at my first message here on 17th April 2006, I saw what looked like a little printed booklet of the laws on Melvyn Bragg's initial programme of his series about some of the most influential world books - that was supposed to be The first FA Rule Book, but I thought even then it looked a mocked-up version. Maybe the DVD will show it more clearly.
Now a book is published called The Rules of Association Football, 1863: The First FA Rule Book with Lord Bragg's introduction, and it seems still no rule book to be seen! - but please correct me if I'm wrong about this.
After nearly 2 months, it is likely we are much closer to knowing what was actually in that first rule book Published by J Lillywhite with the FA's authority. You have wrestled with this topic for much longer than me, and I defer to you also in terms of your time on Wikipedia to understand how things are done here. I guess it would be right to give more weight to the FA minutes than to the Bell's Life version - that is if we want just one version to consider as The version in the absence of an actual print (still no luck on that point.)
Yes, my wikimail has been enabled for some time but I havent yet worked out how to customise my sig:( I'm busy during the day but if you write me I will try to reply within 24 hours. With kindest regards--luke 06:53, 8 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Featured article link[edit]

Since this article is linked from the Wikipedia start page, I will shortly remove the spurious and somewhat confusing 14 laws per the discussion above. The FA was unfailingly less than helpful in assisting to get to the truth, and incidentally their website still says (at the time of writing) there were 14 laws penned in 1863, even after the publication of their own book on the topic based on the written minutes of the decisive meeting (the link can be found above).--luke 06:17, 20 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Football Association Laws of 1863[edit]

How did the Football Association Laws of 1863 develop and evolve into the current Laws of the Game? Take for instance rule 3: After a goal is won, the losing side shall be entitled to kick off, and the two sides shall change goals after each goal is won. The second clause (the two sides shall change goals after each goal is won) is no longer practiced. Rule 5 ("the ball shall not be in play until it has touched the ground") has changed as well, since a header is allowed after a throw-in or a corner kick. When were these rules changed, and how have the Laws of the Game developed? Cows fly kites (Aecis) Rule/Contributions 14:06, 11 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I agree, this article seems to miss the important information (or a link to another article that explains it) of how the original laws evolved into the current laws. The 1863 laws clearly don't resemble football being played today, although I think current world cup strikers would applaud the lack of a cross bar in the original rules! Wjousts (talk) 13:19, 22 June 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Requested move 2008[edit]

Suggest remove "Recreational Cheat Sheet" section[edit]

The section titled "Recreational 'cheat sheet' for U6-U16" should be removed. Not only is no source cited, it is factually incorrect in many places: the "rules" listed do not remotely conform to U.S. Youth Soccer's rules (although no nationality is specified in the section), and there is variation between the U.S. States in some instances anyway, particularly from U-10 and below. If anything must be said at all, perhaps it should simply be recognized the Laws of the Game allow local associations to modify certain rules for youth players and "veteran" footballers, with some links to authoritative sites. TAGregory (talk) 04:37, 28 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Agreed. These rules are not written in any official documentation I'm aware of, and they aren't in line with the rules for U6-U16 in the region where I referee. I understand that many national soccer associations and local clubs have radical differences in their youth soccer rules, compared to FIFA's Laws. Keeping this in mind, perhaps, as you said, it should simply be mentioned that: "the Laws of the Game allow local associations to modify certain rules for youth players and 'veteran' footballers." I agree 100%. --Jroy5 (talk) 00:10, 30 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Agreed I can't see the relevance to The Laws of the Game. I've tagged it (with rather too many tags) in case someone can see what to do with it. If it is useful information (I can't tell), perhaps it could be moved to the relevant section in wikibooks:Football_(Soccer), and could add a link from the article? --94.194.57.116 (talk) 13:12, 12 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Agreed. FIFA's laws of the game state that Subject to the agreement of the member association concerned and provided the principles of these Laws are maintained, the Laws may be modified in their application for matches for players of under 16

years of age, for women footballers, for veteran footballers (over 35 years of age) and for players with disabilities.. Because there can be a vast array of possible combinations in terms of these modifications, it makes no sense to have a single set of such modifications being listed. I'd support adding a section saying that some laws can be modified, but I wouldn't know quite how to write it. I've removed the cheat sheet from the article. --Dalimyr (talk) 15:47, 18 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Requested move 2010[edit]

The following discussion is an archived discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

The result of the move request was: Page moved to Laws of the Game (association football). Editors, please create the appropriate disambiguation page at Laws of the Game. Ucucha 00:50, 25 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]



Laws of the GameLaws of the Game (association football) — (Laws of association football changed) There is an article for another sport (rugby league) that titles its rules the Laws of the Game. There are also several other sports and meanings that use "Laws of the Game". I think a disambiguation page is in order. LunarLander // talk // 02:10, 17 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Other uses:
Rugby union, see: http://www.irb.com/lawregulations/laws/index.html
Short mat bowls, see: http://www.booksonbowls.co.uk/esmbalaws.html
Eton Fives, see: http://www.etonfives.co.uk/about.fives/laws.html
Laws of Australian football, published as "Laws of Australian football", though this web page is titled 'Laws of the Game': http://www.afl.com.au/Season2007/News/NewsArticle/tabid/208/Default.aspx?newsId=43770
Then there are a couple of other games but these are just derivatives regulated by FIFA:
Futsal, see: http://www.fifa.com/aboutfifa/developing/futsal/lawsofthegame.html
Beach football, see: http://www.fifa.com/aboutfifa/developing/beachsoccer/lawsofthegame.html LunarLander // talk // 02:12, 17 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

  • Support I am not usually a fan of revisiting move requests but the argument appears to be much more solid than last time. Its clear that a number of different sports utilize "Laws of the Game" and unless there is agreement that FIFA's "Laws of the Game" are the undisputed primary topic, a fact that seems unlikely, a name change would be appropriate. I am flexible on the name bit the basic format appears to have been set with Laws of rugby league and Laws of Australian football. I should note I would also support Laws of the Game (association football)--Labattblueboy (talk) 15:12, 17 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Rename to rules of association football or rules of football (soccer) or rules of soccer - use "rules" since these are not legislation passed by legislatures. 70.29.210.242 (talk) 08:22, 18 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose Rugby Union is inconsistent with usage of "Laws of the Game" and "Laws of Rugby Union", as evident even on the first page. By the nominator's own admission, Aussie Rules calls its laws "Laws of Australian Football", with "the game" only being used within that context. It's a similar story with cricket. On the other hand, "Laws of football", "Laws of soccer" and "Laws of association football" appear precisely zero times in the entirety of association football's document. I agree that there should be a DAB, but as none of the sports on a remotely similar scale to football can say "Laws of the Game" is the common usage, this page should stay here. In the event that consensus deems that this should be moved in spite of that, my preference would be for Laws of the Game (association football). I would also suggest that the corresponding category is named according to the outcome of this discussion, if there is one. WFCforLife (talk) 21:57, 18 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment I disagree with your interpretation of this rugby union website and laws publication. The graphics on the laws website and book distinguish clearly the name of the sport from that of the laws. There is only one instance of inconsistency on the website, the rest is uniformly 'Laws of the Game'. LunarLander // talk // 01:38, 19 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • I am going to have to agree with LunarLander. Laws of the Game are noted to be in use for other sports (a search online certainly shows that to be the case) and this is reinforced with reliable sources.[2] It's sufficient to show its in use, it doesn't have to be the only use.--Labattblueboy (talk) 21:25, 19 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • The previous discussion established that if the only two uses were for football and rugby league, football could be considered the primary usage. The addition of four minority sports changes nothing. If however we throw into the mix another sport comparable in size to rugby league, such as Aussie rules, rugby union or cricket, football can no longer claim to be the predominant use. I think we are all agreed on that last sentence.
  • To return to Labattblueboy's point, it's very significant. Going by WP:PRECISION, to suggest that football isn't the primary usage would require one of those sports to demonstrate that their laws are primarily called the "Laws of the Game", and that it isn't just a lesser-used synonym. If this can be demonstrated for the sports I have listed (or comparable ones), I would strike my opposition, but thus far I've yet to see any. WFCforLife (talk) 13:10, 20 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
No, it's sufficient to show there is ambiguity as to which is the primary or simply identifying that there is no primary article (WP:PRIMARYTOPIC). Interestingly, my searches showed that chess appears to be a candidate for primary topic, something that was not previously considered. Reliable sources indicate a variety of games that have equal popular usage. In google books, Chess received [3] 777 hits, rugby received 624 hits[4] and association football received 662 hits [5], Tennis produced 590 hits[[6]], Bowling 618-30 hits[7][8]. I also came across cards games or table games (like checkers) that make use of the term. There is frankly little to demonstrate in this discussion that association football is the blow-out leader for the term.--Labattblueboy (talk) 15:17, 20 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Ignoring the fact that association football will receive fewer hits on a californian search, the Google books search does not work, this search suggests that either the search function does not work, or that at least half of the chess laws books also outline football's Laws of the Game. My stance is a simple one. If it can be proved that a second remotely mainstream sport (cricket, tennis, rugby union, tennis, Aussie rules football are just a few examples) primarily uses "Laws of the Game", I will support a move. At the moment nobody has proven this, and football is more likely to be searched for than Rugby League and the four smaller sports combined, therefore I feel the current solution is appropriate. I do however support the immediate creation of a DAB, to replace the link to the category. WFCforLife (talk) 17:58, 20 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Rugby union - 2009 Laws (http://www.rugbyfootballhistory.com/resources/Laws/Full/2009_irb_law_book_en.pdf) instances of the term "laws of the game" 98, instances of the term "laws of rugby union" 0. LunarLander // talk // 20:17, 20 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Move to...

I have no strong preference between Laws of association football and Laws of the Game (association football). Labattblueboy and WFCforLife have supported both and the latter, respectively. At the moment "Laws of the Game (association football)" is favoured. I am happy to change the nominated destination page if this remains the case. LunarLander // talk // 00:15, 21 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Proposal modified in line with discussion. LunarLander // talk // 19:17, 23 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I should note that my preference is still Laws of association football, because its a descriptive title, but that I can live with Laws of the Game (association football) because it permits Laws of the Game to be converted into a dab. page.--Labattblueboy (talk) 21:40, 24 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

Template[edit]

I did this template Template:Association football laws--Feroang (talk) 06:37, 25 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

"This is compared to other professional sports..."[edit]

"This is compared to other professional sports where the rule books number into the hundreds and thousands of pages." I'm not sure what other sports this is referring to. The rules may be simple but the official FIFA "Laws if the Game" PDF is currently 136 pages: http://www.fifa.com/mm/document/affederation/federation/lotg_en_55753.pdf FIBA Official Basketball rules are 81 pages long: http://www.fiba.com/downloads/Rules/2010/OfficialBasketballRules2010.pdf IRB Rugby Laws of the Game are 196 pages http://www.irblaws.com/downloads/EN/IRB_Laws_2011_EN.pdf IIHF Ice Hockey rules are 132 pages total (all sections together) http://www.iihf.com/fileadmin/user_upload/PDF/Sport/rulebook2010/Rulebook_102_127_-_29_September.pdf

These include indexes, covers, appendices etc to varying degrees, but overall it seems most sports rulebooks clock in around 100-200 pages. Not much to compare between them. Certainly none of the above relatively popular sports have rules in the "thousands of pages". Should it be removed? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.55.21.147 (talk) 22:18, 2 September 2011 (UTC)[reply]

There is a similar phrasing that compares the use of technology in association football with its uses in other sports ("Unlike in several other sports ..."). While television replays are in fact used in other sports, goal-line technology is not. Moreover the article to which the term "goal-line technology" is linked only mentions proposals for applications to association football. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.231.71.7 (talk) 16:45, 25 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Two excellent points! I've amended the article to reflect these. As for the "shorter than other rulebooks" thing, I've heard that statement discussed, however it seems unverifiable and unnecessary for the article, so I've simply removed that sentence. LukeSurl t c 12:57, 29 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Structure[edit]

There's a bit of a push and pull here between two versions of the article:

  • Version A where "Laws of the Game" is the first section after the lead, the history of amendments are a subsection of with "History", and "IFAB and FIFA" are grouped together in a section of their own.
  • Version B where "History" is the first section after the lead, amendments are a separate section, but IFAB and FIFA are discussed as subsections of the History section. An additional section "Jurisdiction and change management" additionally discusses IFAB/FIFA further in a separate section.

The content of the two versions is mostly the same, this is a question of arrangement. Version A is preferred by myself and Qed237, whereas B is preferred by Rabono26. A discussion is better than an edit war, so I'm opening this here.

I prefer "A" because of the following:

  • As the current laws are more important for understanding the game rather than how they were arrived at, I believe they should have priority.
  • The process of amendments is part of the history of the laws, and splitting this to a separate section does not seem logical.
  • Version B's discussion of the jurisdiction over the Laws (i.e. FIFA and IFAB) is distributed across several sections and duplicates material. Version A collects this information into one summary, which seems preferable.

Thoughts? --LukeSurl t c 12:17, 11 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I agree with LukeSurl, the reasons given above is how I feel as well. The current laws should have priority and then we can take the in depth history. Qed237 (talk) 12:35, 11 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

My version (B) is quite obviously superior. Specifically:

1. It is quite obviously the convention on Wikipedia for History sections to come first. Anyone who wants to know the current laws are not going to be confused by them appearing further down the page under a clearly marked section.

2. Version A's treatment of IFAB/FIFA is too confusing for the uninitiated reader. All I did was separate what was actually history into the History section, and what is their present day role into Jurisdiction/Change management. I certainly don't see where there is any duplication. There is no logic in assuming the reader wants to read all of that in one section - if there was, then the current rules would also appear in the History section. In my version, readers can choose whether they want a complete treatment of the subject, or whether they want to skip to how rule changes are controlled right now, either because they already know the history of how the voting system came about, or they just don't care. Version A does not give readers that choice, it forces them to read information they might not want to know, and includes a jarring jump from talking about what happened in 1913 to what happens today, followed by a leap back to what happened in 1958.

3. The "Notable amendments" section is a standalone list, and so should be presented as a stand alone section. It is only History in the sense that it lists historical events, but in this case it makes no sense to include in in the history section because a) it is not prose, and b) the events it lists overlaps the time periods of the other History sections. Again, separating content like that in this way is standard practice as far as I've seen in other articles - History sections on Wikipedia are quite obviously meant to be read from top to bottom as a narrative, so deviations from that are undoubtedly going to cause confusion.

Rabono26 (talk) 18:56, 11 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I'm fairly on the fence on the order of the sections. Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Layout#Names_and_orders_for_section_headings doesn't specify a distinct order. Personally I prefer having the current Laws first (for the reasons I outlined above), but Association football does have history as the first section.
I'm more convinced of having the amendments list as part of the history - with the IFAB/FIFA section separate, the "prose" section ends at 1863, and the amendments list (which begins in 1866, no overlap) is a succinct way of describing the Laws' evolution to the present day.
I've made a few edits to the "FIFA and IFAB" section, including renaming it "Governance of the Laws", starting with a summary of what they are and then jumping into their history. Hopefully this makes it clearer and helps justify its existence as a separate section. You are right that this is also mostly history, though I think they are better separate, as one is the history of the Laws themselves, and the other is the history of the lawmaking bodies. --LukeSurl t c 13:32, 12 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Honestly, it's still rubbish. I've read this article before so I know what I'm supposed to be learning (and I can still remember the original reason why I came here, i.e. what I actually wanted to know - the 1958 date), and yet your version is still incredibly hard to read, it takes a lot of mental effort to parse it and store information that you need to keep referring back to because there is no logical order, effort which most readers probably won't waste on this pretty niche subject. It doesn't make anything clearer at all. I can honestly say that finding the information I wanted is just as hard in this version as the original. First I have to establish that it's not in history, even though by any logical standard it should be. I will eventually find it in the Governance section, assuming I hadn't already pulled my hair out at the crazy roller coaster ride you apparently want to take me on in that section by making me read paragraphs that chop backwards and forwards from the present day to history twice. It's almost like you've never actually consulted other articles, where if you did, you would find that what I wrote above about prose, lists, history and order etc, is perfectly standard way to lay out information on Wikipedia. It is presumably done that way because it works. Anyway, I'm done here. This place is ridiculous, and I think I'm realising why people seem to actually pay very little attention to important historical articles like this, instead just wasting their time updating scores etc. Rabono26 (talk) 22:28, 27 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Rabono26 perhaps our differences of opinion come from the fact that I don't consider this to be firstmost a historical article, but instead primarily the "parent" article about the current Laws of the Game (i.e. the articles linked from Laws_of_the_Game_(association_football)#Current_laws_of_the_game are the "children"), with the history of how these came about to be a secondary matter.
Anywho, I'm not terribly worried either way. I was hoping through discussion (with multiple editors) we could arrive at a consensus. If you think that we've come to an impasse, then I'm very happy for you to set out here how you think the article should be arranged and then to formally request a Wikipedia:Third_opinion (or some other form of dispute resolution), whose impartial judgement I will be happy to accept, even if they decide against the structure I have proposed. --LukeSurl t c 12:06, 28 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I'll give it some consideration. This discussion has rambled a bit, so it might need summarising for the reviewer. As a final thought, I really don't see where you got the idea that I consider this to be firstly a history article, other than the rather trivial issue of the History section coming first, and the issue of whether or not the List of amendments should go inside it or not. I am less concerned about those issues, than I am about the mixing of current and historical information in the same section (now named Governance). This is confusing, for all the reasons I gave above. This article should document the current status (what the laws are and how they're changed) and the history of their development (which includes both how they have changed, and how can change them) in clearly separated sections. If you're not terribly worried, then how about this as a solution - we go back to my version, but put the notable amendments inside the History section, and move the sections which detail the current situation above History into a Current situation section - I've just done this in a trial version [9]. Rabono26 (talk) 19:05, 28 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Goal line technology as a notable amendment[edit]

User Eckerslike is objecting to the inclusion of goal line technology on the List of Notable Amendements, claiming "It is a minor change which results from recentism. This would become a very long list if we included every officating change in the history of the game." [10] I don't know if he's been living under a rock or what, but anyone who actually follows football will know that this is absurd - goal line tech has been the most discussed rule change for at least a decade. Just like all people will be talking about for the next decade is video technology. I will reinstate it forthwith if Eckerslike doesn't come up with some examples here of changes which have generated more debate in the last ten years than goal line technology. Rabono26 (talk) 19:12, 28 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I'm moderately on the side of leaving it out. Whereas the other rule changes significantly changed every game of football in the world, Goal Line Tech is only present at a handful of major grounds. Even then, it is only significant in a small fraction of games at those grounds. You are right that its been the most discussed rule change for a while, however this is more an indication of how stable the rules are at the current time - there hasn't been a fundamental gameplay-changing amendment since 1992. It's significance feels greater because it is the most recent change, but this is essentially the meaning of Wikipedia:Recentism.
Mostly on WP:BUILDTHEWEB grounds I'd like to see a wikilink to Goal-line technology somewhere in the article. Perhaps we could change the Video technology section to simply "Technology" and discuss it briefly in there. --LukeSurl t c 21:11, 28 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
This all feels like you two giving your own personal views of why it should not be considered significant, and therefore trying to write Wikipedia according to your own beliefs, rather than objectively judging the evidence of the sources. Humour me - try and find a single source which downplays this change as being relatively unimportant in comparison to other changes already listed, something that will somehow be forgotten in time, or otherwise overlooked because it doesn't affect gameplay. All you will find is sources saying the exact opposite, with it being compared to the importance of changes like the back pass rule, and in some cases being called the most important, even momentous. The fact is is used rarely or in only some stadia is only mentioned in the context of those being some of the reasons why it was so controversial - I couldn't find a single source using those facts to argue it was somehow an unimportant change to the laws. Similarly, the issue of how it would affect gameplay (in terms of both flow of the game and the prevention of erroneous officiating) is only ever mentioned in sources as part of the reason this change was so controversial. And I would not want this being put in the Technology section, that would just perpetuate the issue I had above, the mixing of historical and current information. Goal line technology has happened. Video Technology has not, yet. The distinction is best made by presenting VT as its own section, and listing GT as an already happened amenmdent, an obviously notable one. Rabono26 (talk) 22:22, 28 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Actually the reverse is true. The list is not compiled independently by wiki editors but is a summary of the references listed at the top (Side note: Two are now broken and one of them looks like it was unreliable anyway. So it might be a good idea to recompile the list based on the remaining source.) What represents a notable amendment is inherently subjective so therefore cannot be left to wiki editors to decide. Hence the list is primarily a summary of what FIFA lists as the most notable amendments in its article. Goal line technology was then arbitrarily added with a reference that simply states that the change was made. It is up to you to provide your sources (which you didn't supply) that lists GLT alongside the other amendments. Eckerslike (talk) 23:25, 28 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I did not arbitrarily add it, I included it because I know, based on the source that are out there, that it is considered just as important as the other amendments listed. You then took the arbitrary decision to remove it, on what appeared to me to be subjective reasons (which I quoted above). Only now are you trying to justify it based on the sources, and on that matter, if the list was compiled only according to what FIFA says, then it obviously should be listed, since Sepp Blatter called the change "momentous" (the blacklist won't let me add the link to the pdf, which is bizarre since it's on FIFA's server, but if you simply Google "Goal Line Technology momentous" you will find it easily. It would be hard for anyone to justify that a "momentous" change should not be listed on "notable amendments", no? I rather think, however, that a better approach would be for reliable third party sources to be consulted, since FIFA will obviously be biased toward believing their own views are fact - and based on my own research, you will not find a single such source that supports your view that this was just a minor change (further below). Rabono26 (talk) 18:58, 29 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) I'm not really that bothered by this either way, but, since you posed the challenge, a single source which downplays this change as being relatively unimportant in comparison to other changes already listed is the History of the Laws as written by FIFA themselves [11] which doesn't mention GLT at all but does mention some seemingly minor amendments as no offsides from throw-ins (1920), the attacking side getting the benefit-of-the-doubt in offside decisions (1990), and tackles from behind becoming a red-card offense (1998). To be honest, unless one tries for a comprehensive list (not a good idea), there's always going to be a degree of subjectivity in selecting which amendments to list. --LukeSurl t c 23:34, 28 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Firstly, that page doesn't even have a date on it, so you have no idea if whoever wrote it has even considered (and thus rejected) GLT in compiling the piece. Based on the last line, you could even say it was written before the year 2000. Secondly, as you point out, it mentions several changes that are not on our list, so you can't have it both ways - either GLT should be left off because it's not in there (if we are to ignore the glaring issue of it not being obvious it was even considered), or every change mentioned there should be listed, on the basis that we are using it as the guide to what FIFA considers to be significant changes. And I see no issue with listing every change mentioned in sources like this - that is the definition of notable, is it not? (obviously I don't propose using a source like 'The definitive History of the Laws of the Game' to compile such a list, as that would literally document every change, minor and major). The only alternative would appear to be to provide a source for each change which shows it is considered major or significant on its own merits, and as I've said, GLT would make the cut if that was the standard. Rabono26 (talk) 18:58, 29 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Football boots[edit]

In reports I could read that players of India did not wear boots. They played in 1948 Olympic Tournament barefooted. In addition there is reported that the IFAB did decree to wear boots in 1947? or 1948? or 1949? or 1950?. Do you have further information, please? --Gödvolltreffer (talk) 14:32, 15 April 2016 (UTC).[reply]

Hi Gödvolltreffer. I've had a quick search, but I can't find the answer to your question. You might like to ask at Wikipedia:Reference_desk/Entertainment - the folks there are experts at answering queries such as this. --LukeSurl t c 15:26, 15 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Is there an arcticle about substitutes or / and the method of substituting?[edit]

Dear Sir, it was allowed to substitute players in the qualification for 1954 FIFA World Cup. An injured player was allowed to be substituted in the first half, an injured goalkeeper in the full time. Until 1958/59 it was allowed to substitute an injured goalkeeper. Before allowing substituting in general, England (F.A.) did it. In the most part there was the restriction regarding an injury. But no Referee could verify (excepting, he was a medical). - Is there anything to add regarding method of substituting, is there an article? --213.225.38.186 (talk) 15:23, 28 November 2016 (UTC).[reply]

Yes, the article is at Substitute (association football). Mattlore (talk) 22:34, 28 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Why "laws"?[edit]

I get that that's what the people who wrote them called them, but why did they phrase it that way? To an outsider it seems enormously arrogant, seeming to equate the rules of a simple game to actual legislation. --Khajidha (talk) 12:54, 30 April 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Soccer was likely emulating cricket's Laws of Cricket, which appear to have been described as "Laws" since the 18th century. I don't know whether in that period the word "Laws" had the same officious character as it does today, or was just a neutral synonym for "rules". --LukeSurl t c 15:36, 30 April 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Concussion law[edit]

I was just checking on the news about Theo Walcott, I was wondering if we should add the rules about concussion to the article as noted on [12] Govvy (talk) 19:36, 30 September 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Rest periods after a game would not be part of the Laws of the Game, these only concern the on-field action. --LukeSurl t c 09:02, 1 October 2019 (UTC)[reply]

The Laws of the Game did not originate in 1863[edit]

I don't quite agree that the (London) FA Rules of 1863 were taken as the starting point for the Laws of the Game, because in fact they are not. Historically, the FA members were almost all from London and until c.1880 (a) had much less influence than the Sheffield FC and Sheffield FA Rules and (b) were a good deal less comparable to the Laws of the Game than the Sheffield rules (FC and FA). So the Sheffield rules would be preferable to the London rules. But even these are not the starting point for me.

And when it comes to the first codex, i.e. the combination of different local codes, then the Cambridge university rules are to be taken as the starting point, but not 1863.

Moreover, the article is about the Laws of the Game, and that is only the name of the all-British rules, i.e. those of the IFAB.

In short, either 1848 or 1886 can be taken as a starting point in my view, but not 1863. That would be disregarding the development of the rulebooks. (I refer here to the research of the historian Petra Tabarelli, who also works as an expert in this field for the IFAB) SallyMarchbanks (talk) 14:00, 29 January 2023 (UTC)[reply]