That’s not what I asked. I know the ref can throw people out. I was under the impression that they weren’t to show the card to the coach (or anyone on the sideline that wasn’t a player).
They don’t normally need to do it, but when the coach is interfering with the game, why shouldn’t they? I’ve seen instances of the coach forcefully grabbing a player, should the referee treat that coach like some precious snowflake rather than go “no bullying! OUT! red card”? The coach knows the rules, or should. You’re making me think of people who got a ticket for jaywalking into incomming traffic and who were terribly surprised because “but traffic cops can’t give tickets to pedestrians!” Yes they can, but most pedestrians don’t manage to be stupid enough to get one.
You’re right that, as a matter of form, FIFA refs are told to use cards only for players. Others, such as coaches, should just be asked to leave. I don’t think that was always the case, though, and some competitive bodies may allow for it (some high school competitions have really strange rules). Otherwise, some refs just do what they want to do.
I don’t think this is true, though. If I take the ball and throw it from the touchline, across the touchline and then across the goal line without it touching the ground (or anything else), it would result in either a goal kick or corner kick. But then again, I’m the one who originally thought hitting the ground before the touchline would be okay, too.
no you’re correct, it would be a goal kick. I was talking about throwing the ball from the touch (side) line, crosses over the line into play, then back out of play across the same touch line (due to wind or whatever) it would be a throw in for the other team, whereas if it doesn’t cross the touch line at all and just bounces out of bounds without ever having gone into play it’s just a do-over. If it enters play the ball is live, so if it then crosses the end line it’ll be a goal/corner kick. My point was simply that the above scenario, where it crosses into then back out of play over the same line is pretty unlikely, so it’s usually just assumed it never entered play.
The red piece of plastic is what makes it official and makes the third step (calling the cops/security to remove the coach) possible. The first step is asking nicely.
Sort of like the difference between a cop telling you “your rear light isn’t working properly, that’s a $15 fine” and the same cop writing a ticket. The piece of paper is what makes the difference between “warning” and “fine”.
Anyway, it’s fairly adamant that only someone who is or could be playing can get the cards. Probably a technicality, since there’s no “box” on the score sheet for cards for coaches. But the scorekeeper would probably mark it down somewhere. So that’s the offical rule. Your milage may vary and all that.