A report on Euro 2024 issued by UEFA’s Referees’ Committee has mentioned that Germany ought to have been awarded a penalty for handball of their quarterfinal defeat to Spain.
As a part of UEFA’s common work to challenge steering to officers, it opinions conditions and provides recommendation on how they need to be handled and it identified {that a} penalty ought to have been given.
The sport was 1-1 on the finish of the primary interval of additional time when a shot from Jamal Musiala struck the arm of Marc Cucurella.
Germany’s gamers had been incensed that referee Anthony Taylor didn’t award a penalty, indicating the Spain defender had his arm near his physique.
That call was suported by the VAR, Stuart Attwell. Spain received the sport 2-1 by a Mikel Merino aim within the 119th minute, and went on to carry the trophy by beating England within the remaining.
Earlier than the match, Roberto Rosetti, chief refereeing officer for UEFA, had introduced examples of a shot on aim and the arm being near the aspect, explaining this shouldn’t be thought-about handball.
Nevertheless, the report from the Referees’ Committee mentioned it didn’t take into account Cucurella’s arm to be shut sufficient to his physique. It said that “hand-to-ball contact that stops a shot on aim must be punished extra strictly, and generally a penalty kick must be awarded, until the defender’s arm could be very near the physique or on the physique.”
It added: “On this case, the defender stops the shot on aim together with his arm, which isn’t very near the physique, making itself greater, so a penalty kick ought to have been awarded.”