IT’S A SAD DAY for the world’s more climate-sensitive professional footballers: the FIFA body tasked with overseeing changes to the rules of the game has banned the snood.
The odd garment – probably best described, as Wikipedia offers, as ‘a tubular neck scarf’ – has become particularly popular this season, especially in this part of the world as the winter was harsher than usual.
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But at a meeting of the International Football Association Board – comprised of four FIFA reps and one each from the football associations of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – football chiefs voted to outlaw the garment, effective from July 1 this year.
The reason is because the rules of the game are quite specific about what a player can, must, and can’t wear on the pitch – so while equipment like a shirt and shorts are considered a requirement, accessories such as the snood are officially thought to be superfluous to a footballer’s needs.
It means that players like Arsenal’s Samir Nazri, Manchester City’s Carlos Tevez, Manchester City’s Patrick Vieira, and Manchester City’s… well, the entire Man City squad – will have to suffice with the cold if it strikes again next Winter.
The IFAB meeting also voted to extend trials of goal-line technology, after decreeing that none of the ten systems experimented with by the game’s governors had fulfilled FIFA criteria.
Football chiefs to ban on-pitch snoods from July
IT’S A SAD DAY for the world’s more climate-sensitive professional footballers: the FIFA body tasked with overseeing changes to the rules of the game has banned the snood.
The odd garment – probably best described, as Wikipedia offers, as ‘a tubular neck scarf’ – has become particularly popular this season, especially in this part of the world as the winter was harsher than usual.
But at a meeting of the International Football Association Board – comprised of four FIFA reps and one each from the football associations of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – football chiefs voted to outlaw the garment, effective from July 1 this year.
The reason is because the rules of the game are quite specific about what a player can, must, and can’t wear on the pitch – so while equipment like a shirt and shorts are considered a requirement, accessories such as the snood are officially thought to be superfluous to a footballer’s needs.
It means that players like Arsenal’s Samir Nazri, Manchester City’s Carlos Tevez, Manchester City’s Patrick Vieira, and Manchester City’s… well, the entire Man City squad – will have to suffice with the cold if it strikes again next Winter.
R.I.P., the brave snood (01)
R.I.P., the brave snood (02)
R.I.P., the brave snood (03)
R.I.P., the brave snood (04)
R.I.P., the brave snood (05)
R.I.P., the brave snood (06)
R.I.P., the brave snood (07)
R.I.P., the brave snood (08)
R.I.P., the brave snood (09)
R.I.P., the brave snood (10)
R.I.P., the brave snood (11)
The IFAB meeting also voted to extend trials of goal-line technology, after decreeing that none of the ten systems experimented with by the game’s governors had fulfilled FIFA criteria.
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Carlos Tevez FIFA Goal-line technology IFAB International Football Association Board Samir Nasri Snood