Simulation crackdown: If they like the spotlight so much, put A-League actors up before the Match Review Panel

By Stuart Thomas / Expert

Phillip Cancar’s rather comical and momentarily delayed dive in the 36th minute of Newcastle Jets 3-1 win over Sydney FC on Sunday was a clear reminder of the blight that simulation is on the game of football.

Sydney’s Robert Mak was the guilty party, red carded for violent conduct after Cancar had drawn him into a feisty situation seeking the free-kick, and to further stoke Sydney’s frustration during what was another bad day for Sky Blues.

Mak was annoyed, turned away from the defender and made a “leave me alone” gesture with his left arm as he flung it into the air. Sadly for him, it caught Cancar rather gently on the face, nothing more than a glancing blow that would hardly have swatted a fly to its death.

In the true ‘spirit’ of simulation, Cancar acted as though he had been shot and took a rather thespian dive to the ground. He had his hands to his face, making it clear to the referee that he had been belted by Mak, intentionally. leaving him in need of urgent medical attention.

I’m not sure who thought the offence was a red, neither coach indicated so in the post-match press conference, Mak certainly didn’t and I would guess Cancar was applauded by his teammates for getting one over Sydney with a shrewd piece of simulation that football can well do without.

Whilst being cognisant of not throwing Cancar under the bus to take the fall for the many players that have done something similar this season and in campaigns past, the need for such incidents to be reviewed by the Independent Match Review Panel is urgent.

The panel involves itself in the aftermath of matches, attempting to ensure whether a clear or obvious mistake has been made and that justice is brought quickly to the situation if required.

Often the situations that require the MRP’s involvement concern the awarding of a card to the wrong player in a case of mistaken identity, or they may use the laws of the game to identify a clear and obvious error made by a referee and adjust or dismiss the full extent of the punishment that has followed.

However, the MRP primarily looks at mistakes made by officials in their decisions during the ninety minutes. Fundamentally, the system is not intended to attempt to spot other moments that have been missed.

For example, should a player clearly bring an opponent down in the area where a red card should have been shown, the referee waves play on and the VAR finds insufficient evidence to overturn the decision, the player escapes scot-free and will not be red carded in retrospect.

As is the case with Cancar.

Blind Freddy can see precisely what he was up to, everyone watching at home picked it up very quickly and perhaps the fans inside the ground and the referee himself were the only people not to fully grasp his dramatised reaction to what was far from a violent act.

How the VAR interpreted it as such is anyone’s guess and Sydney deserve an apology from the player himself and the referee on the day, citing the clear and obvious error that was made.

I would go a step further.

Simulation hurts football, always has and always will, yet when the game is openly mocked by followers of other sports, the need to obliterate it becomes ever more clear.

Cricket’s use of technology has created a few interesting moments where players become wary of claiming catches down low to the ground and then being made to look like a cheat if the footage shows otherwise.

Once played under an honesty policy where the fielder’s word was taken, the technology has actually lessened the indecision and temptation of cricketers to perhaps see what they wanted to see, rather than what actually took place.

Referee Jack Morgan gestures towards Phillip Cancar. (Photo by Scott Gardiner/Getty Images)

Had Cancar been aware that any obvious examples of simulation would likely see him mentioned at the MRP and subsequently banned for a game or two, I would suggest he would be far less likely to have acted the way he did.

A footballer is happy to take a shot at gamesmanship, knowing full well that even if spotted, the worst he or she will cop is a yellow card.

Dragging players before the panel when simulation is clear, if diving occurs without contact or when a so-called injured player springs back to their feet when the ball suddenly re-enters their attacking third, is a logical step forward for football.

There is nothing more embarrassing for players to be caught play-acting or attempting to gain an advantage through dishonest means.

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Perhaps if they were called out and punished for doing so the game would look a whole lot better and the majority would stop doing it.

The Crowd Says:

2024-04-10T22:29:27+00:00

338

Roar Rookie


ALeague off air.. they need a bigger swear jar!

2024-04-10T20:46:10+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


A very thoughtful response.

2024-04-10T16:42:03+00:00

Tim Carter

Roar Pro


The referee wasn't conned. Contact was made to Cancar's face. The rules do not try to measure pain. It's a wrongly black and white rule that was correctly applied.

2024-04-10T16:35:45+00:00

Tim Carter

Roar Pro


I’m a big fan of what you have to say as well. I am a multi-sport fan, but football and rugby league are at the top for me. Next time I write an article, it’s going to be called “Reflections of a Former Active Supporter” but I can’t find the time to do it justice. Regarding Cancar’s simulation with intent, I agree that it shouldn’t be part of the game, especially not in Australia, but he did the right thing by his team. Modern refereeing sees the face as sacrosanct, and when VAR is scrutinizing EVERYTHING, that piece of theatrics was always going to lead to the red card given. Cancar only risks a yellow (contact was made, and video reviews to determine that contact are not concerned with whether or not a player was actually hurt, so that was never going to happen), and reputational damage (an intangible). Maybe he won’t get a call in his favour in an upcoming round, but he was doing what the rules incentivised him to do for the good of his team. When a rule is broken, focus on the rule before those who use the rule to their advantage.

2024-04-10T13:16:13+00:00

Cavaquinho

Roar Rookie


Interesting and worth considering. However, being slightly facetious, who would incur more points? Mak for the simulated back-hander or Cancar for the simulated fall? Looking at the situation another way, I think most of us want these incidents dealt with during the game. They are part of the beautiful (and not so beautiful) game. In that spirit I would have liked to have seen the referee give out a yellow to both Mak and Cancar, for different types of unsporting behaviour.

2024-04-10T07:04:53+00:00

Football is Life

Roar Rookie


Gents, I am no advocate in any way shape or form of simulation it brings the game a bad name. What I did observe was a senior player who got completely and utterly duped by a younger player who had his number. How silly was Mak to even respond!!! Not condoning any of the reaction from Cancar but he had Mak's number when he was lacing his boots. Apart from the Cancar incident, the Jets proved that nothing is certain in football and in the first half they played Sydney off the park. But i do agree that simulation is only an embarrassment to the game. Two key points came from Sunday's game, A) Play football, if you want to be a thespian, joint a theatre company and B) Senior players are there to lead by example, Mak did anything but.

2024-04-10T05:36:37+00:00

Brendan James

Roar Rookie


Cancar made me crankier than a burned kransky!

2024-04-10T03:04:53+00:00

338

Roar Rookie


Id agree except he's been a great earner in my fantasy team....

2024-04-10T02:20:45+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


Sharn's great, future in the team but not Paris Olympics. Pleased to hear Gustaffson post-match say the reason she got game time was because she worked hard in training.

2024-04-10T01:46:50+00:00

Grem

Roar Rookie


Sharm Friar just came on - another QLD girl.

2024-04-10T00:13:45+00:00

Garry

Roar Rookie


In good news they actually did the right thing re Davila's throat grabs and gave him 2 weeks suspension.

2024-04-09T23:41:39+00:00

Sport all rounder

Roar Rookie


Staging and simulation is in football's DNA. Its a tactic fundamental to the most players playbook. If the game wanted to rid itself of this embarrassing reality, it would have done so by punishing such gutless behaviour. The game is complicit in enabling simulation.

2024-04-09T23:09:35+00:00

338

Roar Rookie


Seems the MRP have downgraded the charge against Mak but upheld the red. What does MRP stand for again? Misguided Refereeing Preferred?

2024-04-09T11:57:08+00:00

Hudddo

Roar Rookie


Funny how the only time, anyone cares about simulation seems to be against Sydney FC.

2024-04-09T10:09:49+00:00

MarkCroydon

Roar Rookie


Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Colombia, etc etc all say hi.

2024-04-09T08:22:55+00:00

Garry

Roar Rookie


ps "The CommBank Matildas will take on the recent Concacaf W Gold Cup semi-finalists on Tuesday, 9 April 2024 (local) / Wednesday, 10 April 2024 (AEST) in their first meeting in thirteen years. Australian fans will be able to watch the game on 10 and simulcast on 10 Play and Paramount+, with kick-off set for 10am (AEST)."

AUTHOR

2024-04-09T07:35:27+00:00

Stuart Thomas

Expert


But should FIFA accept it? They have nudged it quite a bit over the years but I would like to see them nudge far more firmly.

2024-04-09T07:29:11+00:00

FourwingSweepa

Roar Rookie


100% agree mate

2024-04-09T07:11:06+00:00

mrl

Roar Rookie


As I said earlier, it does not happen at all in my son’s under 15 matches. But I can see why it does occur. The boys crash into each other whilst half the parents are crying “ref, yellow, free”. The boys check each other are okay and play on. Who are the grownups?

2024-04-09T07:01:49+00:00

mrl

Roar Rookie


Or the Old Testament Mathew 22:12.

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