In today's Champions League Final, I counted about five serious errors made by the referee. He failed to see the elbow that Sergio Ramos delivered to Karius' head in the first half (when Karius went flying back into the net at a Real Madrid corner) and he missed the blatant pulling down of Salah by Ramos that changed the flow of the game in Real Madrid's favour. But the error I wish to question because, having listened to many commentators, I have the sense that FIFA may have changed the interpretation of the law. It has to do with the first goal. Back in the early 70s, FIFA decreed that any challenge that interrupts a keeper's distribution of the ball is a free kick to the keeper's side and an automatic yellow card for the perpetrator. This was issued after a Juventus forward had charged down (in a manner similar to Benzema, he stuck his foot out) a kick by Bayern's goalie, Sepp Maier, in a European Cup game in 1968 when the ball went into the net and the goal was given. Hence, I was most surprised when today's referee did not whistle the ball dead when Benzema interfered with Karius' delivery. The interpretation issued by FIFA did not differentiate between a kick or a throw.
Can someone enlighten me? Was today's referee's decision correct? If so, what has happened to the interpretation issued by FIFA? Has it been changed?