A player or substitute who is "booked" is being punished for misconduct; either a caution or a send off. A player or substitute who is "cautioned" is being warned. It is one type of misconduct. When a player is cautioned, they are shown a yellow card.
It means that you are very busy.
When you are released you are supposed to have everything you had on you when you were booked in, returned to you. Are you sure you actually had anything on you wehen you were booked in.
Eric Caldow
In any type of law enforcement situation, a suspect is "booked in" to the jail awaiting trial. Being "booked out" means that you have either posted bail or been released on your own recognizance. In other words, you are once again free to roam the countryside.
They could already hold a tune before they were being booked into clubs.
yes, if u feel like being a disgusting player. but whatver tickles ur peach bro.
By injury would be one reason, but you may be referring to being not allowed to play. That would be a disciplinary issue. If they are booked by a referee twice in one match, they can be sent off and will then miss the next game. If they are booked twice over the course of a number of games, as bookings are cumulative, they can miss the next game too. If they are directly sent off in a match, they can miss a game too. So there are lots of ways it can happen.
A holding pin is a jail cell where people are kept while being booked or held. It is a temporary place for imprisonment.
No because England's smallest player ever was 5 feet and 4 inches tall
I means that Comerford was cautioned and shown the yellow card, and the player being described was also cautioned immediately or shortly thereafter. The referee generally has a notebook to keep the official record of goals scored, sanctions issued, and substitutions made. As such, a player who is cautioned and shown the yellow card is often said to have been "booked", or in the case of this question, Comerford was "put into the referee's notebook", followed by the player described.
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