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GAA hope new regulations will reduce cynicism

The GAA hopes the new regulations put in place will reduce fouling
The GAA hopes the new regulations put in place will reduce fouling

In an effort to battle the cynicism and persistent fouling that has begun to infiltrate Gaelic Games, the GAA have produced a pack outlining new regulations for referees to follow from January.

The pack includes a DVD which demonstrates the forbidden fouls and what cards are deemed relevant for which offences.

Come January, in the subsidiary provincial competitions right through to the national leagues, a three-tier disciplinary system will be set in motion.

The aim of the new regulations is to allow the players that best use the skills of the game to be allowed to demonstrate those skills.

Red cards offences will undergo no change in the referee’s rule book but seven additional offences will be punishable by yellow cards.

These are yellow cards with a different result. The recipient of the yellow card will be sent to the line - at the next break in play they can be replaced by a substitute. The maximum number of substitutes allowed (including regular substitutes) at any one time is six.

This new yellow card method is hoped to punish the individual more than the team and thus become self-regulating through players and managers themselves.

The yellow card offences are pulling down an opponent to tripping with a hand or hurl; deliberately body checking an opponent after he has played the ball away; bringing an arm or a hurl around the neck of an opponent on the ground and away from play; remonstrating in an aggressive manner with a match official and using a hurl in a careless manner, arguably the most contentious of the seven.

The black book will remain in place for many lesser offences and two black books will remain the equivalent of a yellow card.

Task force chairman Liam O’Neill said: ‘We constantly hear about teams who play to the rules or play to the edge in whatever way. Well, we want to make that edge a lot sharper now and anyone who plays to it will get cut.

‘We want to make a bargain to our younger players that you grow up in a game where persistent fouling won’t bother you one bit, where you solo by a person without having your head taken off, where you can take the field without fear of being pulled down, where you can part with a ball without being pasted.

The bargain we are making with young players is, play your game skilfully and we will protect you.’

The presentation DVD will be available on the GAA website.

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