A player in Portugal’s fifth tier can make a claim that almost no other player in the world can. He received a white card from the referee.
During a game between União Montemor and Alcaçovense it looked as if the forward was destined to score a goal.
A long ball from the União Montemor goalkeeper was headed toward goal, however it was easily intercepted by an Alcaçovense defender.
Disaster struck when the defender on the ball went down with an injury meaning the União Montemor forward had a free look at goal.
Rather than taking the easy goal, the forward did this.
Portuguese player receives white card from referee
Here’s something you don’t see every day.. the white card! pic.twitter.com/DnV36cJjgf
— I Love Shakhtar Donetsk (@buffafalos) October 17, 2023
Portugal introduced the new card color this year and it’s meant to be given as a sign of fair play. The forward’s decision to not take advantage of the defender getting injured earned him the white card.
At first it looked like the referee had given him a yellow, but trust us, it was white.
Portugal is the only country that has this rule. The first time the white card made an appearance was in January when the medical staffs of Sporting and Benfica’s women’s teams aided a fan. The referee showed the card to both staffs.
REF SHOWS WHITE CARD ⬜️ Referee issues white card to Benfica and Sporting medical staffs after both ran to aid of a fan who had fainted in the stands during a Portuguese Women's Cup match. White cards are used in Portugal to praise acts of fair play.pic.twitter.com/JsJAGn9H0j
— Men in Blazers (@MenInBlazers) January 23, 2023
The white card doesn't actually do anything in terms of tiebreakers or reducing yellow cards. The new card is simply a sign of respect and spotlights moments of fair play.