The rules look like punishment for the manager; in practice they reinforce the club’s ability to run the dugout by proxy and keep the real power with the bench and the board.
Touchline Bans Punish the Figurehead While the Chain of Command Stays Intact
When a Premier League manager is suspended, the headlines focus on the sanction. As the BBC reported in its explainer on what happens when a manager gets suspended, bans are triggered by accumulated yellow cards: three cautions mean a one-match touchline ban, six mean two matches, nine mean three, and at 12 the manager faces a misconduct hearing. The banned manager must sit in the directors’ box or a stand away from the technical area; he cannot shout instructions to players or staff or position himself in or near the dugout. So far, so punitive. But the same BBC article and Premier League guidance make clear what the manager can still do: he can communicate with the dugout via phone, runner or electronic device; he can give the pre-match team talk; he can be in the dressing room at half-time and full-time; he can conduct pre- and post-match media. In other words, the club’s tactical and motivational pipeline stays open. The assistant or another coach runs the touchline, relaying the manager’s messages. The hierarchy does not change; only the location of the boss does.
That design is no accident. The FA and Premier League rules, as set out in the BBC piece and on the Premier League’s own site, draw a sharp line between physical presence on the touchline and everything else. Extended bans do go further: the manager can be barred from the changing room from 30 minutes before kick-off until 30 minutes after, and stadium bans forbid entry to the ground altogether, with no direct communication from kick-off to full-time. But the standard touchline ban is calibrated to look serious without actually removing the manager from the decision-making loop. The BBC notes that for 2025-26, bans apply to league and FA Cup games but not to European fixtures or domestic cup finals, so clubs can time the “punishment” around the matches that matter most. The message is that the manager has been disciplined, while the structure that allows the club to control the bench remains in place.
Who benefits? The club hierarchy. The board and the sporting director keep the same chain of command; only the face on the touchline changes. The assistant who steps up is almost always the manager’s deputy, schooled in the same system. As reported across the BBC and other outlets, when a manager is banned, an assistant typically takes charge in the technical area and stays in contact with the suspended manager. So the rules look like punishment for the manager; in practice they reinforce the club’s ability to run the dugout by proxy and keep the real power with the bench and the board.
What This Actually Means
Manager bans are a compromise between the need to sanction touchline behaviour and the reality that clubs will not accept being stripped of their leadership structure for a run of games. The result is a sanction that satisfies the optics of discipline without meaningfully shifting control. The manager is inconvenienced; the club is not.
What Happens When a Premier League Manager Is Suspended?
Under current Premier League and FA rules, a manager serving a touchline ban must watch from the directors’ box or a designated area away from the technical area. He cannot be on the touchline or in the dugout, and he cannot shout instructions to players or staff during the match. He can, however, communicate with the bench by phone, radio or runner, and he can be in the dressing room before kick-off, at half-time and after the match. Pre- and post-match press duties still apply. Bans are triggered by yellow card accumulation (e.g. six yellows for a two-match ban) or by a red card, which brings at least a one-match ban. For 2025-26, these bans apply to league and FA Cup matches but not to European games or domestic cup finals, as the BBC has reported. Incidents such as Wolves manager Vitor Pereira receiving a straight red for dissent, as covered by NBC Sports, show how touchline sanctions are applied; the club hierarchy continues to operate through the assistant and the bench.
Who Runs the Team When the Manager Is Banned?
An assistant coach or other designated staff member takes charge in the technical area and on the touchline. That person typically relays instructions from the suspended manager, who remains in the stadium and in contact with the bench. So the tactical and organisational chain stays intact; only the physical presence of the head coach is restricted. The club hierarchy therefore never really loses control during a standard touchline ban.