Developing Stories
Wednesday, July 1, 2026    
Strict anti-time-wasting laws kick in today
Strict anti-time-wasting laws kick in today
Football
Wednesday, 1 July 2026 by Ashmond Nzima

 

MBABANE-A massive shift hits world football today, July 1, 2026.

The International Football Association Board (IFAB) 2026/27 Laws of the Game officially become binding worldwide. From Europe’s elite leagues to the  Eswatini MTN Premier League, teams must immediately adapt to radical new rules explicitly designed to kill off tactical time-wasting and improve match flow.

While the International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) manages the global business of soccer and runs tournaments like the World Cup, IFAB remains the sole independent guardian of the game's regulations. Their latest sweeping changes represent the most aggressive crackdown on gamesmanship in a generation, introducing strict, clock-monitored penalties.

At the heart of the overhaul is a ruthless new five-second countdown on restarts. Referees will now issue a visible countdown if they deem a player is deliberately delaying a throw-in or goal kick. Failing to restart play in time will trigger an immediate, harsh turnover of possession: A delayed throw-in flips to the opponent, while a delayed goal kick results in a corner kick awarded to the opposing side.

Furthermore, the infuriating sight of substituted players slowly walking across the pitch is over. Under the new 10-Second Substitution Rule, a player must exit within 10 seconds of the board being raised. If they fail, their team pays a severe price: The team must play a man down, and the incoming substitute is barred from entering the pitch until the first natural stoppage after one full minute of running game time has passed.

To completely eradicate tactical injury faking, IFAB has also introduced a mandatory one-minute injury cooling-off period. Any player receiving on-field medical treatment or forcing a stoppage due to injury must now exit the pitch and wait for one full minute of active playing time before they are allowed back on.

For Eswatini’s football hierarchy, coaches and players, the message from IFAB is clear: Adapt instantly or face severe, match-altering consequences. The era of running down the clock is officially dead.

From Europe’s elite leagues to the  Eswatini MTN Premier League, teams must immediately adapt to radical new rules explicitly designed to kill off tactical time-wasting and improve match flow.
From Europe’s elite leagues to the Eswatini MTN Premier League, teams must immediately adapt to radical new rules explicitly designed to kill off tactical time-wasting and improve match flow.

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