You can see the scenario below which shows how a goal can be scored from a throw in! The player who scored the goal was originally in an offside position. However, an offside offence was not called because his teammate played the ball from a throw in. The Laws of the Game were made in such a way to promote attacking football.
The attacking team will be able to make attacking runs worrying about being in an offside position. For all of these set pieces, it is hard for you to be a direct threat on goal. As such, it does not really make sense to call offside for these situations. There are only a few examples where a goal scored is assisted by a goal kick or a throw in.
This is because the keeper or thrower needs to play the ball all the way for the striker to score! Without the offside offence, you will be able to run around more freely.
This helps to make the game more fluid and reduce the number of stoppages as well! The offside rule does not apply to a goal kick, corner kick or throw-in. These set pieces are not as direct a threat to the goal , compared to a free kick. There are other scenarios during which the offside rule does not apply too. They are the following:. We will leave discussing these scenarios for another article, but if you are interested in learning about corner kicks in general, then you can check this article , and you can also learn about the flip throw-in here.
The offside rule applies to most of the other game scenarios. Some people confuse a goal kick with other kicks that the goalkeeper performs. So in this small section of the article, I am going to attempt to make that distinction for the people who do not know about it.
A goal kick is the kick that is performed by placing the ball in a stationary position on the ground, and kicking it forward. Post by scouseclaret » Sat Feb 15, pm It would appear so, thatsberight You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Last edited by scouseclaret on Sat Feb 15, pm, edited 1 time in total. McNeil immediately passes it back to Westy before he has time to get onside. Well that is exactly what happened in this instance except that corner taker was only a fraction offside when the pass to him was made.
By the time he received the ball he was clearly onside but at the time the pass to him was made he was fractionally offside. Hope that helps clarify things. You often used to get corner takers offside at short corners and this was just a weird version of that UTC. Or the player that receives a pass from the corner kick.
These players cannot be offside because they received the ball directly from the corner kick. This player cannot be offside. However, as soon as one player has touched the ball directly from the corner kick, the offside rule is in force again, and the next player to touch the ball could be offside. If the players are not alert to this fact, they could easily make a mistake and find themselves penalized for being offside.
Having looked a whether a player can be offside from a corner kick, I want to quickly explain the two other instances in a soccer game where a player cannot be offside. There is no offside at a goal kick because this would prevent the player taking the goal kick from being able to pass the ball to any player on their team outside of their half of the field.
Then all the opposition players would have to do to prevent a player from the team taking the goal kick from receiving a pass would be to stand on the halfway line. If all the defending players stand on the halfway line, then any attacking player in the attacking half of the field would have:. This would put them in an offside position, and they would commit an offside offense if they touched the ball directly from the goal kick.
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