Soccer Law 11: Offside
Offside
is a Law in association football which
effectively limits how far forward attacking players may be
when involved in play. Simply put, a player cannot gain an
advantage by waiting for the ball near the opposing goal with
only the goalkeeper between him and the goal (only in the usual
situation that the goalkeeper is the last defender).
The offside is perhaps the most complex of
the football rules, and people not familiar with the game often
have difficulty in understanding it.
The application of the offside rule is best
considered in three steps; Offside position, Offside
offence and Offside sanction.
Offside Position

A player is in an offside position if
"he is nearer to his opponents' goal line than both the ball
and the second to last opponent," unless he is in his own half
of the field of play. A player level with the second to last
opponent is not in an offside position. Note that the last two
opposing players can be either the goalkeeper and an outfield
player, or two outfield players.
In 2005 The International Football
Association Board agreed a new Decision in Law 11 that being
'nearer to his opponent's goal line' meant that "any part of
his head, body or feet is nearer to his opponents' goal line
than both the ball and the second last opponent. The arms are
not included in this definition." This is taken to mean that
any part of the attacking player named in Decision 2 has to be
past the part of the second last defender closest to his goal
line (excluding the arms) or past the part of the ball closest
to the defenders' goal line.
In general, what this means is that either
the attacking team should ensure the opposing team having at
least two players (of which the opposition's goalkeeper is
included) in between the goal line and the nearest player of
the attacking team, or all players of the attacking team should
be behind the ball such that it remains closer to the goal line
than any of the player of the attacking team.
It is important to note that being in an
offside position is not an offence in itself. And also
important to Law 11 is that a player cannot be offside when the
ball is received directly (i.e. not being touched by a team
mate before receiving it) from a goal kick, corner kick, throw
in or when the player is in his own half. The same Decision 2
decides when a player is considered to be in the opponent's
half (head, chest, legs etc).
Offside Offence
A player in an offside position is only
committing an offside offence if, "at the moment the
ball touches or is played by one of his team", in the opinion
of the referee, he is involved in active play. A player is not
committing an offside offence if the player receives the ball
directly from a throw-in, goal kick or corner kick, or passed
by an opposition player.
In order for an offside offence to occur the
player must be in an offside position when the ball is touched
or played by a team-mate; a player who runs from an onside
position into an offside position after the ball was touched or
played by a team-mate is not penalised. Similarly, a player who
is in an offside position when the ball is touched or played by
a team-mate may potentially commit an offside offence even if
they run back in to an on-side position before receiving the
ball.
Determining whether a player is in "active
play" can be complex. FIFA issued new guidelines for
interpreting the offside law in 2003 and these were
incorporated in law 11 in July 2005. The new wording seeks to
more precisely define the three cases as follows:
- Interfering with play means
playing or touching the ball passed or touched by a
teammate.
- Interfering with an opponent
means preventing an opponent from playing or being able to
play the ball by clearly obstructing the opponent's line of
vision or movements or making a gesture or movement which,
in the opinion of the referee, deceives or distracts an
opponent.
- Gaining an advantage by being in an
offside position includes playing a ball that rebounds
to him off a post or crossbar or playing a ball that
rebounds to him off an opponent having been in an offside
position.
In practice, a player in an offside position
may be penalised before playing or touching the ball if, in the
opinion of the referee, no other team-mate in an onside
position has the opportunity to play the ball.
The referees' interpretation of these new
definitions is still proving controversial, largely over what
movements a player in an offside position can make without
being judged to be interfering with an opponent. The famous
quote: "If he's not interfering with play then what's he doing
on the pitch?" is attributed by some to Bill
Nicholson.
Offside Sanction
The sanction for an offside offence is
an indirect free kick to the opposing team, at the spot where
the offence occurred. Most referees use their discretion and
let play go on if the "offended" team already has the advantage
or ball, in order not to slow down play with redundant free
kicks that achieve the same purpose of giving the advantage or
ball back to the "offended" team. This discretion should not be
confused with the advantage clause, which can only be applied
to Law 12. In essence, the referee who doesn't whistle offsides
must be judging that one of the elements of offsides was not
present.
Officiating
In enforcing this rule, the referee depends
greatly on an assistant referee, who generally keeps in line
with the second to last defender in his relevant end (exact
positioning techniques are more complex). An assistant referee
signals that an offside offence has occurred by first raising
his or her flag upright without movement, and then when
acknowledged by the referee, by raising his or her flag in a
manner that signifies the location of the offence:
- Flag pointed downwards: offence has
occurred in the third of the pitch nearest to the assistant
referee.
- Flag horizontal to the ground: offence
has occurred in the middle third of the pitch.
- Flag pointed upwards: offence has
occurred in the third of the pitch furthest from the
assistant referee.
The assistant referees' task with regards to
offside can be difficult, as they need to keep up with attacks
and counter attacks, consider which players are in an offside
position when the ball is played, and then determine whether
the offside positioned players become involved in active play.
The risk of false judgement is further enhanced by the
foreshortening effect, which occurs when the distance between
attacking player and the assistant referee is significantly
different from the distance to the defending player, and the
assistant referee is not directly in line with the defender.
The difficulty of offside officiating is often underestimated
by spectators. Trying to judge if a player is level with an
opponent at the moment the ball is kicked is not easy: if an
attacker and a defender are running in opposite directions,
they can be two metres apart in a tenth of a second.
History
Offside rule dates back to the early years of
the game, and was much stricter in the past than it is today. A
player was "off his side" if he was standing in front of the
ball (compare with the current offside law in rugby—a game
descended from the same roots), that is, between the ball and
the opponent's goal. This was by no means universal —the
original Sheffield Rules had no offside, and players known as
"kick throughs" were positioned permanently near the opponents'
goal.
In 1848, HC Malden held a meeting at his
Trinity College, Cambridge rooms, that addressed the problem.
Representatives from Eton, Harrow, Rugby, Winchester and
Shrewsbury Schools attended, each bringing their own set of
rules. They sat down a little after 4pm and by five to midnight
had drafted what is thought to be the first set of "Cambridge
Rules". Malden is quoted as saying how "very satisfactorily
they worked".
Unfortunately no copy of these 1848 rules
exists today, but they are thought to have included laws
governing throw-ins, goal-kicks, halfway line markings,
re-starts, and the disallowing of holding and pushing. They
even allowed for a string to be used as a cross bar.
Slowly, as these rules were tried, tested,
written and re-written over the following years, a revised set
of Cambridge Rules was drawn up in 1856. A copy of these rules,
thought to be the oldest set still in existence, can be found
in the Shrewsbury School library.
As football developed in the 1860s and 1870s,
the offside law proved the biggest argument between the clubs.
Sheffield got rid of the "kick throughs" by amending their laws
so that one member of the defending side was required between a
forward player and the opponent's goal; the Football
Association also compromised slightly and adopted the Cambridge
idea of three. Finally, Sheffield came into line with the F.A.,
and "three players" were the rule until 1925.
The change to "two players" rule led to an
immediate increase in goal scoring. 4,700 goals were scored in
1,848 Football League games in 1924-25. This number rose to
6,373 goals (from the same number of games) in
1925-26.
Throughout the 1987-88 season, the GM
Vauxhall Conference was used to test an experimental rule
change, whereby no attacker could be offside directly from a
free-kick. This change was not deemed a success, as the
attacking team could pack the penalty area for any free-kick,
and the rule change was not introduced at a higher
level.
In 1990 the law was amended to consider an
attacker to be onside if level with the second to last
opponent. This change was part of a general movement by the
game's authorities to make the rules more conducive to
attacking football and help the game to flow more
freely.
In 2003, FIFA issued more stringent
guidelines for penalising offside infringements, to encourage
attacking play. As such, whether a player in an offside
position is penalised depends on his actions and location. With
this modification, attackers are no longer penalised when they
get behind the defenders from an onside position while having a
passive teammate in an offside position. Thus there are more
goals scored through legitimate defence-splitting passes
without being penalised.
Offside Trap
The offside trap is a defensive tactic. When
an attacking player is making a run up the field with a
team-mate ready to kick the ball up to him, all the defenders
(except the goalkeeper) will move up-field in a relatively
straight line in order to put the attacker behind them just
before the ball is kicked, hence putting the attacker in an
offside position when the ball is kicked. Defenders using this
tactic often attempt to bring an attacker's potential offside
status to the attention of the assistant referee, typically by
shouting or raising their arm.
The use of the trap can be a risky strategy
as all the defenders (except the goalkeeper) have to move up
together in a relatively straight line, otherwise the attacking
players will not be in an offside position as long as they are
behind the goalkeeper and a defender that has not moved up; if
the offside trap fails, the attacking players will have an
almost clear run towards the goal. The 2003 rule changes have
made it even more perilous as a tactic, since the definition of
active play was made more stringent. Thus, teams attempting an
offside trap are less likely to have an offside offence called
when they have caught a player in an offside position if he is
deemed by the referee to be not in active play.
One of the best-known defenders to employ the
offside trap was Billy McCracken of Newcastle United. It is
claimed his play pressured officials to modify the laws in
1925, reducing the required number of defenders between the
attacker and the goal line from three to two.
Source: Wikipedia
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