Amazon Search and Bookmark
AFFILIATE SEARCH | Shop Amazon.co.uk using this search bar and support WHO!

Premier League changes for 2024-25 - The Athletic

West Ham Online's Football Forum
Post Reply
Alan
Posts: 1079
Old WHO Number: 10317
Has liked: 3 times
Been liked: 151 times

Premier League changes for 2024-25 - The Athletic

Post Alan »

"The Athletic Premier League changes for 2024-25: How VAR, handball and offside will be different By Dan Sheldon Ready yourselves for another season of… legal battles, endless debate about clubs’ finances, VAR outrage, nine-year player contracts and managerial sackings. Yes, the Premier League is back! After a summer of Spain winning the European Championship, Argentina lifting the Copa America, and Olympians playing football in Paris and other French cities, the real entertainment is returning to a screen near you. And it starts at Old Trafford this evening (Friday), where Manchester United host Fulham to kick-start another nine months of unscripted drama otherwise known as Pure Barclays. There will still be 22 footballers on the pitch, a referee, a couple of nervous managers and thousands of fans in attendance, but there have been some tweaks to the format for 2024-25. Leicester City, Ipswich Town and Southampton are back in the top flight, new laws are being introduced, semi-automated offside rulings are on the way, a new ball will be kicked around, there are fresh faces in the dugouts and, for the first time since October 2015, no Jurgen Klopp. So, without further ado, allow The Athletic to steer you through the need-to-knows ahead of the new season… Changes to VAR The Premier League and PGMOL, the match officials’ organisation, accepted they lost their way with VAR last season, so spent the summer reminding match officials, club managers and players of its importance, while also unveiling a six-point plan to improve it. This focuses on reducing delays to the match involvement, in-stadium announcements on decisions, better communication, maintaining a high threshold for VAR intervention, more transparency and more stringent training. Supporters inside stadiums will now be shown all ‘goals’ that get disallowed on the venue’s big screen(s), as well as a definitive clip if there has been a delay to the restart of the action because a goal has been checked for a potential offside or possible foul. There is also a new Premier League Match Centre social-media account that will communicate the facts regarding VAR decisions. The PGMOL went on a VAR recruitment drive over the summer, receiving interest from around 60 officials, and 12 new specialist video assistant referees will be rolled out during the season. Video assistant referees at PGMOL’s Stockley Park base have been told not to get involved in subjective calls, instead only intervening when there is a ‘clear and obvious error’. A new term will also be heard: “referee’s call”. It will be used to make it clear the on-pitch decision is critical in the process, and that this should stand unless there is, yes, a clear and obvious error. If a referee gets sent to the pitch-side monitor, the replays they are shown on it will be played at normal speed. Only when a point of contact is being established will the frames be slowed down. Semi-automated offsides introduced Semi-automated offside technology (SOAT) is coming, although not for the start of the season as the technology is still being tested. The Premier League expects it “from after one of the autumn international breaks”, so it could be September, October or as far away as November. SOAT — yes, another acronym — has proven effective and efficient, most recently at Euro 2024. Before that, it was used at the men’s World Cup in 2022. Genius Sports, already a data partner of the Premier League, will supply the technology. You can read a full breakdown of what to expect from it elsewhere on The Athletic. Revised handball rule After receiving feedback from the players that there were too many penalties given for handball last season, changes have been made to what constitutes that offence. The Premier League has advised players that not every touch of a hand or arm on the ball is an offence and that they are not expected to move with their arms into an unnatural position behind their backs to try to avoid such contact. It will not be handball if the player concerned is deemed to be in a justifiable position or making a justifiable action; if there is a clear change of trajectory when the ball is touched by, or deflects off, the same player; or if the ball hits the supporting arm when a player falls to the ground. PSR alternative being trialled The current profit and sustainability rules (PSR) will remain in place for this season, but a shadow system of the new regulations will be trialled ahead of the 2025-26 campaign. Clubs agreed to this non-binding shadowing at the league AGM in June and it will comprise squad cost rules (SCR) and top to bottom anchoring rules (TBA). The Premier League and its clubs want to evaluate the system alongside European football governing body UEFA’s financial regulations. SCR regulates on-pitch spending to a proportion — 85 per cent — of a club’s football revenue and net profit/loss on player sales. TBA is a de facto hard salary cap that would limit the amount any club could spend on their first-team squad to five times the amount the bottom-placed team the previous season received from the Premier League in centralised media and sponsorship income. A key difference with these new financial rules is that clubs will now be asked to provide accounts twice a year, in March and October, meaning the Premier League will be assessing them on more up-to-date information. The league’s proposed anchoring rule faces stern opposition from the Professional Footballers’ Association, the players’ trade union in England and Wales, and was voted against by three of the 20 clubs — Aston Villa, Manchester City and Manchester United — in April. The new Premier League ball (Nathan Stirk/Getty Images) Changes to team news, the mid-season break, the ball and celebrations There are a few other changes. Team news will now be released 75 minutes before kick-off, rather than an hour, while players were informed last season that there would be no mid-season break in 2024-25 due to a congested calendar. To help with player welfare, the Premier League is starting a week later than usual this season, on the third weekend in August. There is also going to be a new ball, the Nike Flight (pictured above), which marks the sportswear company’s 25th year as the league’s official ball supplier. It has been designed to generate more powerful strikes and has moulded grooves intended to reduce drag. Another change that has been welcomed by the players is a new 30-second allowance for celebrations after a goal has been scored, which will not be included in the game’s added-on time."
User avatar
El Scorchio
Posts: 2312
Old WHO Number: 227648
Has liked: 58 times
Been liked: 410 times

Re: Premier League changes for 2024-25 - The Athletic

Post El Scorchio »

I read VAR will be looking a lot ore closely at 'blocking' etc. from set pieces. So I presume we're going to see a shitload of tenuous ones which may be highly subjective or accidental called for smaller clubs while certain clubs (I think we can guess which ones) will get away with murder.
Post Reply