In the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup semifinal, a potential penalty for Fluminense against Chelsea was overturned after VAR review deemed defender Trevoh Chalobah's arm in a natural position. The incident at the 37-minute mark highlighted ongoing debates over handball rules. Referee Francois Letexier reversed the on-field decision, allowing play to continue without sanction.
The match between Chelsea and Fluminense in the FIFA Club World Cup semifinals, held from June 14 to July 13, 2025, saw a contentious handball moment early in the first half. At the 37th minute, Fluminense appealed for a penalty after the ball struck Chalobah's arm inside the Chelsea penalty area. Initial judgment awarded the spot-kick, but VAR intervention prompted referee Francois Letexier to review the play. He determined Chalobah's arm hung naturally by his side, pointing downward, aligning with IFAB guidelines on permissible arm positions.
IFAB, the body overseeing football's Laws of the Game, updated handball rules ahead of the 2022/23 season, clarifying that contact above the armpit line—colloquially the 'sleeve rule'—is not penalized unless blatant. The rules specify offences including deliberate touches, making the body unnaturally bigger, or scoring directly or immediately after hand/arm contact, even accidentally. A natural position, undefined precisely but guided by context, avoids punishing unavoidable defensive movements.
This case echoed IFAB's 2021 guidance and a May 2024 statement: a falling player's supporting arm between body and ground is natural, warranting no offence. Similar rulings occurred in the 2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup final, where Mexico's Jorge Sanchez's fall onto the ball went unpunished, and the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations group stage, where Egypt's Yasser Ibrahim's supporting arm during a slide led to a drop ball rather than a penalty for South Africa.
Leagues like the Premier League and UEFA have issued interpretations relaxing penalties for deflections or close proximity, but IFAB's core laws emphasize risk assumption in unnatural positions. The overturn preserved game flow, underscoring VAR's role in consistent application amid persistent gray areas frustrating players, coaches, and fans.