Why A Sixth Substitute In Football May Not Automatically Mean A Forfeit Loss

Since 2020, the rules of football (namely Article 3.2 of the IFAB Laws of the Game), allow for five substitutions per team, per match. Therefore, the general understanding to date has been that if a team substitutes a sixth player, it loses the match by forfeit. This also happened to the German club VfL Wolfsburg 1 in a cup encounter against SC Preußen Münster in August 2021.
However, in a recent decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), a Sole Arbitrator decided that a sixth substitution does not necessarily lead to a forfeit defeat. This article reviews the case, which was between Saipa FC v. Peykan FC & Islamic Republic of Iran Football Federation (IRIFF),2 and provides helpful analysis on what it may mean for similar cases in the future.
The first Respondent, Peykan FC, was represented by the author. The decision had not been published as at the date of publishing this article.
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- Tags: Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) | Dispute Resolution | Football | Iran | Regulation & Governance | Sports
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Written by
Dr Vitus Derungs
Dr. Vitus Derungs is a Swiss qualified Attorney at Law and Expert in International Sports Law.
He has held the following positions since 2003: Single Judge of FIFA Players’ Status Committee; Legal Counsel at FIFA Players’ Status Department; ad-hoc clerk at CAS; General Counsel and Member of the Board at Grasshopper Club Zurich; President of the Transfer Committee at Swiss Football League (SFL); Member of European Club Association (ECA) Transfer Expert Group, International Relationship Working Group and Legal Advisory Panel.