FA to phase out heading in grassroots youth games

A young player heads a football at sunsetImage source, Getty Images
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There will be no disciplinary sanction for a deliberate header in a match, unless considered a persistent deliberate offence

The Football Association is to introduce a new rule to phase out deliberate heading in grassroots youth matches across England.

It will cover all leagues, clubs and any affiliated school matches, and will phase heading out for all games at under-11 level and below over the next three seasons.

The introduction of the rule follows a two-season International Football Association Board (Ifab) trial.

It will cover all under-seven to under-nine matches from the 2024-25 campaign, before expanding to include under-10 level from 2025-26 and under-11s the following season.

Research commissioned by the FA last year found former professional footballers are almost three-and-a-half times more likely to be diagnosed with dementia than the general population.

Deliberately heading the ball will result in an indirect free-kick being awarded to the opposing team.

The indirect free-kick will be taken at the point where the ball was deliberately headed, or, if deliberately headed in the penalty area, the game will restart from the nearest sideline of the penalty area.

The FA said about 16,000 teams and 107,000 players participated in the Ifab trial, launched in 2022.

"Our aim is to also create more technical opportunities for players with the ball at their feet, allow for more effective playing time, and to reduce the amount of time the ball is in the air during a match," the FA said.

In 2021, it was recommended professional footballers in England should be limited to 10 "higher force headers" a week in training.

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