French coach Arsene Wenger has been seeking to radically alter the infiltration law since he took over the presidency of the FIFA Development Department.

Wenger stressed during the statements to "Sky Sports" that the current infiltration law should change in the European Nations Championship "Euro 2020" next summer, so that players are punished for infiltration with any part of the body that the player can score a goal with (all the body except the arms) in the event that there is The attacker is on one line with another defender.

"There will be no decisions based on the advance of millimeters of the attacker's body over the cannons," said Wenger.

Wenger's proposals to amend the offside law are scheduled to be discussed on the 29th of this month at the General Assembly of the International Football Legislative Council (IFAP) in Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland.

IFAP is the first responsible for the legislation and the amendments to the Football Law adopted by the International Game Federation (FIFA).

Article 11 of the Football Law is devoted to infiltration, the controversy of which does not stop even when there is an assistant video ruling (var).

It is noteworthy that Wenger's proposal comes in the shadow of a wave of outrage from the law of infiltration and the intervention of the assistant video rule in it, as many targets were canceled on the pretext of the infiltrator of the attacker with a part of his body that may not exceed millimeters.

UEFA President Alexander Chevron attacked the infiltration law several times sarcastically, when he recently said that a player could sneak in his nose if he was long.