Michael Carrick says the bodily battles at set-pieces within the Premier League have “gone too far”, including to the rising debate round grappling and jostling contained in the penalty space.
A rise in objectives from dead-ball conditions has been a defining characteristic of the 2025-26 season, with extra set-piece objectives already scored than within the entirety of the earlier marketing campaign.
Arsenal have been central to that development and added two extra from corners of their 2-1 win over Chelsea on the weekend.
However the rise has sparked concern in some quarters. Brighton boss Fabian Hurzeler accused Arsenal of time-wasting at corners and throw-ins, whereas Arne Slot advised an overreliance on set-pieces has decreased the “pleasure” of top-flight matches.
Talking forward of United’s journey to Newcastle, Carrick mentioned the stability has shifted too far.
“I believe it’s gone too far,” he mentioned. “It wasn’t way back we had been instructed you couldn’t lay a hand on anybody within the field and we had been instructed it might be clamped down. It’s crept in, the success of corners and with the ability to put our bodies shut collectively has made extra groups do it.
“It’s comprehensible why there are such a lot of groups doing it and making an attempt it. As a sport, it doesn’t really feel like we’ve bought that stability proper. I don’t know what to do about it, it’s not for me to determine.
“Within the meantime, you bought to take care of what’s in entrance of you, and if it’s allowed, then you definitely bought to play to it.”
Ian Maxwell of the Worldwide Soccer Affiliation Board lately acknowledged the difficulty of grappling at corners however mentioned it has not been formally mentioned. Ifab plans to introduce a five-second countdown for referees to implement at throw-ins and goal-kicks when gamers take too lengthy, although there are not any proposals to increase that to corners at this stage.
