UEFA chief dismisses 'absurd' English stoppage-time rules
Referee show the Hublot Board with the 5 minutes extra time during the UEFA Under-21 Euro 2023 final match between England and Spain at Batumi Arena, Batumi, Georgia, July 08, 2023. (Getty Images Photo)


Zvonimir Boban, the chief of football at the European governing body, declared Wednesday that the "absurd" new stoppage-time regulations introduced by English football this season to prevent time wasting will not find application in UEFA competitions.

Following FIFA's approach at the men's and women's World Cups, England's referee's body said in July officials would add on the exact time lost to goal celebrations, substitutions and injuries.

The aim is to increase the time the ball is in play, with games now routinely going beyond 100 minutes in total.

Manchester City midfielder Kevin De Bruyne, Manchester United defender Raphael Varane and global players' union FIFPRO have criticized the new approach, saying it will increase player workload in an already packed schedule.

"It's absolutely absurd," former AC Milan and Croatia midfielder Boban told reporters in Monaco.

"Regarding player welfare, it's some kind of small tragedy or a big tragedy because we are adding almost 12, 13, 14 minutes.

"When you play 60, 65 minutes – I can speak from my experience, especially as a midfielder – when you get tired, it's the last 30 minutes of the game. And then somebody comes and adds another 15 minutes.

"How often we have spoken critically about the calendar and too many games? We are not listening to players and coaches ... It's crazy. It's too much, so we will not do this. Our guidelines are different."

UEFA's chief refereeing officer Roberto Rosetti backed Boban and said the governing body had been working for five years to increase the time the ball was in play during its competitions.

"There is something more important than the accuracy of additional time," Rosetti said. Why do people like the Champions League so much? Because it's intensive, it's fantastic, the players never stop.

"We tell our referees to speed up the restart of play instead of focusing on stoppage time."