SINGAPORE – Loud boos echoed around stadiums in North America this week, with fans showing hydration breaks the red card at the FIFA World Cup, particularly on June 17 during the England-Croatia and Ghana-Panama games.
World governing body FIFA’s mandatory three-minute breaks to help players cope with the summer heat and humidity during the tournament have been controversial.
Some critics say they affect the flow of the game, while others noted that it has turned a game of two halves into an American-style sport of four quarters – like the National Football League – to allow for advertisements.
Many are claiming that FIFA has gone offside with the decision.
For the record, the concept of water breaks is not new. They were first introduced at the World Cup in 2014 on a case-by-case basis in Brazil and activated at the referee’s discretion when Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature – which factors in heat, humidity, wind and cloud cover – exceeded 32 deg C.
Locally, one-minute water breaks were also introduced in the Singapore Premier League in 2020 and 2021 as action returned following a Covid-19 enforced suspension of the professional football league. These were discontinued from the 2022 season.
Singapore’s football fraternity and local experts whom The Straits Times spoke to were divided on the mandatory hydration breaks, with some calling it a positive move for players and match officials when conditions are unbearable, while others noted that they can be disruptive to the game.
A spokesman for the High Performance Sport Institute and NUS Heat Resilience and Performance Centre said: “The mandatory three-minute breaks in the middle of each half could help players and referees manage the physical demands of playing in hot and humid conditions, giving them time to hydrate and cool down.
“This can help them maintain a higher level of performance by delaying fatigue.”
National football captain Hariss Harun noted that “players don’t complain” about having the breaks.
The Lion City Sailors skipper and Football Association of Singapore vice-president, who attended the 2025 World Club Cup semi-finals and final at the MetLife Stadium in the United States, said: “The summer afternoon kick-offs can be really hot and humid. If it felt uncomfortable in the stands, what more the players who have to compete on the pitch.
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