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Spain edges Canada in men's rugby test match with penalty kick on final play in Edmonton
Spain edges Canada in men's rugby test match with penalty kick on final play in Edmonton

CBC

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • CBC

Spain edges Canada in men's rugby test match with penalty kick on final play in Edmonton

Spain's penalty kick on the final play of the game was enough to defeat the Canadian men's rugby team 24-23 in Friday's test match. The host Canadians recovered from an 11-6 halftime deficit at Edmonton's Clarke Stadium to take a 20-11 lead on the strength of two tries by Calgary's Matt Oworu. Peter Nelson of Dungannon, Northern Island, contributed 13 points from the tee for Canada, but Spain capitalized on a last-minute penalty to snatch the win. Lopez Bontempo's 25-metre kick sealed the victory for the visitors. Back-to-back yellow cards to Canada's props — Calixto Martinez for a high tackle and Emerson Prior for collapsing a maul — had handed momentum back to Spain. A penalty try and another Bontempo kick brought the score to 23-21. The match wrapped July's test window for Canada ahead of the Pacific Nations Cup. Canada opens against the United States in Calgary on Aug. 22 in a match that doubles as the start of Canada's 2027 Rugby World Cup qualification campaign. "I think we showed we have the talent to hang with everyone," Oworu said after the loss to Spain. "When we were pushing to score at the end, we just slipped for half-a-second, and that's just test rugby. It's a game of inches, and we just missed on that last inch."

Alvarez's Atletico Madrid shootout blunder leads to IFAB rethink on penalty retakes
Alvarez's Atletico Madrid shootout blunder leads to IFAB rethink on penalty retakes

Malay Mail

time04-06-2025

  • General
  • Malay Mail

Alvarez's Atletico Madrid shootout blunder leads to IFAB rethink on penalty retakes

PARIS, June 4 — If Julian Alvarez slips while taking a spot kick for Atletico Madrid at the Club World Cup this month, he will get the second chance he was denied in the Champions League in March, after international football's rule-making body on Tuesday clarified the double-touch rule. Football's rule-making International Football Association Board (IFAB) announced that if players unintentionally touch the ball twice while taking a spot-kick and still find the net, they should be allowed a retake. Alvarez slipped as he netted his penalty kick in a shooutout to decide a Champions League derby against Real Madrid. Video review (VAR) detected that he had touched the ball twice and the referee ruled the shot a miss under Law 14, which deals with penalty kicks. Real went on to win the shootout 4-2. After the match, European governing body Uefa said that 'under the current rule, the VAR had to call the referee signalling that the goal should be disallowed'. Uefa said it would hold talks with world football's governing body Fifa and the rule-making International Football Association Board (IFAB) to discuss the issue. On Tuesday, IFAB issued its ruling. It was due to come into force on July 1, but Fifa at once announced the change would apply to the Club World Cup, which kicks off in the United States on June 15 with both Madrid clubs among the 32 teams. Uefa also adopted the change, stating that 'all Uefa matches, starting with the Uefa Nations League semi-final between Germany and Portugal on 4 June 2025 will now be played under the new interpretation of Law 14'. 'The situation where the penalty taker accidentally kicks the ball with both feet simultaneously or when the ball touches the penalty taker's non-kicking foot or leg immediately after they have taken the kick... is rare,' wrote Lukas Brud, IFAB's secretary in a circular. 'As it is not directly covered in Law 14, referees have understandably tended to penalise the kicker for having touched the ball again,' he wrote. However, he added, the law 'is primarily intended for situations where the penalty taker deliberately touches the ball a second time before it has touched another player'. 'This is very different from the penalty taker accidentally kicking the ball with both feet simultaneously or touching the ball with their non-kicking foot or leg immediately after they have taken the kick, which usually occurs because they have slipped.' Brud pointed out that even an accidental second touch could be unfair to a goalkeeper because it changes the ball's trajectory. Therefore, he wrote, IFAB had decided that 'if the kick is successful, it is retaken'. If a kick during the game is unsuccessful, the result is an indirect free kick, as it would be for a deliberate second touch, unless the referee decides to play an advantage for the defending team. In a shootout it remains a miss. — AFP

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