Mats Hummels questions Hoffenheim goal after help from ball boy

Published on: 11 September 2017

Mark Uth scored a brace as Hoffenheim beat Bayern Munich.

Bayern Munich defender Mats Hummels has questioned the legitimacy of one of the goals in Hoffenheim's 2-0 victory on Saturday after they were assissted by a ball boy.

Umut Tohumcu, a Hoffenheim under-14 attacker, was quick to react and became the unlikely hero as he set up the opening goal by throwing the ball to Andrej Kramaric.

Bayern had been the dominant side in the opening stages of their match at Hoffenheim, but were caught off-guard after 27 minutes following Hummels' long clearance of a ball which had already crossed the touchline.

With the ball far away in their own half, Hoffenheim rushed a new ball back into play with the help of the ball boy, and seconds later attacker Mark Uth opened the scoring before adding a second goal after the break.

While Hoffenheim coach Julian Nagelsmann praised the 13-year-old ball boy for his quick reaction, Hummels, who chased after the ball he sent flying into the other half, later cited the German Football Association (DFB) rules and questioned the legitimacy of the goal.

While the DFB has a rule in place stipulating that a referee must only stop play if a second ball on the pitch is disrupting an ongoing situation, there is no such line on how to react when a second ball comes into play before a throw-in or set piece.

"That rule does not fit for this situation," Hummels wrote on Twitter. "Since it doesn't change a thing now, I ask out of sheer curiosity. You live and learn."

The ball boy said after the game that he was delighted to be able to help out Hoffenheim.

"I saw that Andrej Kramaric wanted the ball, and I threw it to him straight away," he told Bild. "It was my ball boy debut at the pros. It's a great feeling I could help. It's my pleasure."

Stephan Uersfeld is the Germany correspondent for ESPN FC. Follow him on Twitter @uersfeld.

Comments

Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, photo & other personal information you make public on Facebook will appear with your comment, and may be used on ESPN's media platforms. Learn more.

Source: espn.co.uk

Comments