Panel approves additional one-minute releasable penalties in women's lacrosse

Three-second rule also tweaked

Posted on 7/19/23 3:43 PM

To curtail physical play outside the critical scoring area in women's lacrosse, the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on Wednesday approved increasing the scenarios when teams have the advantage of playing a player up.

Green cards, which are one-minute releasable penalties, will be given to teams committing fouls such as:

A one-minute releasable penalty would also be issued for these types of fouls when occurring between the restraining lines.

Officials also can give a five-minute red card for contact to the body if they think the contact warrants a greater penalty. All red cards are now a five-minute nonreleasable penalty instead of the previous two-minute penalty.

Three seconds

The panel approved tweaking the three-second rule, specifying that a defender must be an arm and stick length away when guarding a player inside the 8-meter arc. Previously, the rule was the defender had to be a stick length away.

Defensiveplayers will still be penalized for three-second violations if they are not marking a player inside the 8-meter arc.Any defensive player inside the 8-meter arc must be guarding another player and can't be in the middle of the arc without marking a player.

Other rules changes

Also, shoes can have soles containing aluminum, leather, rubber, nylon or plastic cleats, studs or bars, whether molded as part of the sole or detachable, if the official does not consider them dangerous.

Rescinded proposal

After receiving feedback from the membership, the NCAA Women's Lacrosse Rules Committee rescinded a proposal for 6-vs.-6 play when the ball is possessed below the restraining line and 11-vs.-11 in total.

However, teams can experiment with 6-vs.-6 rule below the restraining line during non-traditional fall competition. Committee members will seek feedback from teams that experiment with this rule.