Roy Hodgson blasts the handball rule
Roy Hodgson blasts the handball rule

Watch: Roy Hodgson says handball rule is killing the game and says referees don't agree with it either


Roy Hodgson labelled the handball rule "nonsense" and says it's "killing the game" after he watched Crystal Palace lose 2-1 at home to Everton due to Richarlison’s 40th-minute penalty.

Joel Ward was punished after the ball hit his hand inside the area from Lucas Digne’s header, but only after the video assistant referee gave the power back to the referee at Selhurst Park.

Kevin Friend awarded the Toffees a spot-kick after he used the pitchside monitor and it proved decisive after Cheikhou Kouyate had cancelled out Dominic Calvert-Lewin’s opener for the visitors in the capital.

Even though Palace benefited from a similar decision last weekend away to Manchester United, the Eagles manager criticised the handball rule and highlighted another penalty given earlier in the day for the Red Devils at Brighton.

Hodgson insisted: “I criticised it last week if you remember correctly. I said that wasn’t a penalty.

“I didn’t think this one was a penalty and I don’t think the game I watched on TV before this one started – when Neal Maupay was adjudged to have handled the ball – was a penalty. I think it is a nonsense.

“I think it is a nonsense when we get one and a nonsense when we get one against us and it is only serving a purpose for you guys (in the media).

“Obviously discussions and dramatic moments are what keep your work in full swing, but for us in football I find it very disappointing that the game I love and believe in is being reduced to this level.

“Every week games are being decided on so-called penalty decisions for handball which are definitely not handball.”

According to the International Football Association Board, if the ball hits the hand of a player who has made their body “unnaturally bigger” then a foul will be awarded.

Ward, on his 250th appearance for Palace, was deemed to have done just that in the 37th minute and it left Hodgson perplexed.

“I just don’t understand how we have allowed it to happen,” the 73-year-old added.

“How the Premier League, the referees, coaches, managers and players have allowed this type of situation which we have virtually in every match to occur.

“The rules of football are important, one of the beauties of the rules is basically everybody knew them because we all played it in the school yard.

“Now we have to take on board rules which we are being suggested are the right ones to judge handball and I don’t think they are the right ones to judge handball.

“I think whole thing is a nonsense and I am always disappointed a good game of football, between two good teams which should have finished as a draw, now means one goes away with three points and the other with zero.

“The winner leaves knowing full well it shouldn’t have been a penalty and the losers goes away knowing we have played well enough but this penalty has robbed us of taking any points from the game.”

He added to BBC Sport: "It's completely unacceptable and it's certainly enjoying my enjoyment of the game of football. I'm just disappointed that the result went against us in the way it did as a result of a rule that we've now brought into football which I think is killing the game. I've not just said it today, I've been saying it all along.

"For me the handball rule should be a simple rule. When you deliberately handle the ball to prevent a goal or to get an advantage, it's handball. And when the ball hits you and you can do nothing about it, it's not handball."

He added on Amazon: "I don't want to profit from it or lose from it.

"I predict what will happen is players will start flicking the ball onto a hand - because they're clever - and screaming 'handball' and referees will have to then go to the monitor and then give it.

"I do not believe in the rule. People in football find it hard to accept. I don't blame the referees. The referee doesn't think it is handball either. He doesn't want to give it but has to, because that's what he is told to do. How can that be right, it's ridiculous."

Everton boss Carlo Ancelotti saw his team make it five straight wins in all competitions this season, but was not completely satisfied with the display at Selhurst Park.

“The performance was difficult,” the Italian admitted, despite guiding the Toffees to the top of the table. “We had difficulties.

“The game in the first half was quite good and we were able to play how we wanted, the second half was more difficult because Crystal Palace played a good second half and put a lot of pressure on us.

“We were not able to play with the ball like we wanted, but the spirit defensively was good and we worked hard. We left out the quality but the attitude defensively was good from all the players.”

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