England were caught out by a rarely-seen new FIFA rule at the World Cup on Saturday, minutes into their clash with Panama.The Three Lions saw one of their throw-ins overturned for time-wasting in the opening stages of the Group L game.England were caught out by the new rules in the opening minutes against PanamaGettyBukayo Saka had picked up the ball to take the throw-in, but as Jarrell Quansah came over to take it instead, things took too long. Saka rolled the ball to Quansah to let him throw it in, however, as he did that, the referee blew his whistle. The official overturned the throw-in, awarding it to Panama instead of England, enforcing a new FIFA rule.At the 2026 World Cup, the time-wasting rule was brought in as one of many rule changes for the tournament. Players now have a five-second limit to take one, with the count not starting until the player picks up the ball. The referee has the authority to then decide whether they think the player is deliberately halting play.And if they think so, the set piece is awarded to the opposition, as England found out against Panama.The same rule has been put in place for goal-kicks by FIFA too.Missed a trickSaka and Quansah were caught out by the rule on Saturday night – and they will wish they’d have copied Andy Robertson. The Scotland captain was praised by fans earlier in the tournament, as Robertson found a cheeky way to avoid being penalised.Referee Abdulrahman Al Jassim was not happy with how long England were takingGettyIn Scotland’s first World Cup game in 28 years against Haiti, the left-back didn’t pick up the ball to allow himself extra time. As he lined up for the throw-in, he signalled for his teammates to get into position before getting the ball in his hands. That meant the referee couldn’t start the five-second countdown, avoiding the decision going the other way.This is a developing story and is being updated.For the latest updates, breaking news alerts, and comprehensive analysis, refresh this page or follow our real-time news coverage by watching and listening to talkSPORT live.For broader context, explore related coverage on our homepage for the top trending stories. For the latest talkSPORT videos, download the app.talkSPORT cares about getting it right, not just getting it first and because this is a developing situation, details will change. We will be updating this page constantly with verified info, expert takes, and official statements.Stay tuned for further developments as this story continues to break.