Yes, looked it up because I was wondering why players stood in apparently offside positions from goal kicks
Err no.
Did you know if you take a goal kick and no one touches it and it bounces all the way through into your opponent's goal they get a goal kick? If a penalty hits the bar/post and bounces back to the other end of the pitch and goes in the goal, it's a corner.
Sorry but are you saying that you thought you could kick the rebound into the goal or were you just being sarcastic?Err no.
But why do defenders push up to the halfway line then for goalkicks, before dropping back at the last minute, if it's not to try and catch opponents offside?
On the topic of offsides can someone clear up that Rooney one on Sunday when it was 0-0. He was coming back from an offside position and not interfering with play when the German defender kicked it back and Rooney was 1 on 1 with acres of space only to be flagged offside. I was shouting at the tele but the commentators didn't flag it as a major decision and said he was off...? Surely if he's inactive in the first phase of play once the defender touches it he is onside?
Was a massive decision...
On the topic of offsides can someone clear up that Rooney one on Sunday when it was 0-0. He was coming back from an offside position and not interfering with play when the German defender kicked it back and Rooney was 1 on 1 with acres of space only to be flagged offside. I was shouting at the tele but the commentators didn't flag it as a major decision and said he was off...? Surely if he's inactive in the first phase of play once the defender touches it he is onside?
Was a massive decision...
The ball was being played up to rooney while he was in an offside position. The german player got a touch to it when he tried to intercept it, but the initial ball to an offside rooney was from an england player.
It would have to be a pretty BIG ball to reach the goal without travelling its circumferenceOr course, as long as the ball moves more than it's circumference it's fine.
I think you need to double check that. Penalty is a direct free kick so it would be a goal. Same as if there is an indirect free kick and you kick it into your own net without it being touched by someone else it is a goal.
Ball enters the goal
• if a direct free kick is kicked directly into the opponents’ goal, a goal is
awarded
• if a direct free kick is kicked directly into the team’s own goal, a corner kick is awarded to the opposing team
If you take a penalty and it rebounds off the post back to you to put it in the net it's disallowed.
Err no.
The kicker isn't allowed to touch the ball until someone else has.
So he's interfering cos the balls trying to be passed to him? It's still a grey area though isn't it - I thought once the defender touched it he's onside and the initial offside shouldn't be flagged cos it didn't reach him?
Err no.
He's interferring because the ball was played to him, by a team mate. He was in an offside position. The ball was played to him. So he was offside. The german player's touch was essentially a slight bump in it's path, had the german player matched to trap the ball or bring it down, then turned and passed it would have been onside, but as it was simply a deflection the german player didn't technically 'play the ball'. It's not that grey.
Didn't know about the penalty hitting the post and the taker not being able to touch it again until someone else has. Common sense when you think about it though.