Soccer Law 17: The Corner Kick

A
corner kick is a method of restarting play in a game
of association football (soccer). It was first devised in
Sheffield under the Sheffield Rules in 1867. It was adopted
by the Football Association in 1872.
Award
A corner kick is awarded to the attacking team
when the ball leaves the field of play by wholly crossing the goal
line (either on the ground or in the air) without a goal having
been scored, having been last touched by a defending
player.
Procedure
The ball is initially placed wholly within the
corner arc closest to where the ball went out of play. The corner
arc is located at the intersection of the goal line and touch line,
and has a radius of 1 yard. All defending players must be at least
10 yards (9.15m) from the ball until the ball is in
play.
The ball becomes in play as soon as it is kicked
and moves.
A goal may be scored directly from a corner kick,
what is known as an "olympic goal". A player may not be penalised
for being in an offside position direct from a corner
kick.
Infringements
Opposing players must retire the required
distance as stated above. Failure to do so may constitute
misconduct and be punished by a caution (yellow card).
It is an offence for the kicker to touch the ball
a second time until it has been touched by another player; this is
punishable by an indirect free kick to the defending team from
where the offence occurred, unless the second touch was also a more
serious handling offence, in which case it is punishable by a
direct free kick or penalty kick, as appropriate.
Strategy
A corner kick may result in a good scoring
opportunity, either directly (rarely), or through getting the ball
to teammates in front of the net, known as a cross, where
the ball is often played by a "header". An alternative strategy is
to play a short corner, in which the ball is kicked to a
player located closer to the kicker, between the corner and the
goal area. This is usually used to move to ball away from the
goal-line in order to create a better angle on the goal.
The defenders may elect to form a "wall" to
attempt to force the ball to be kicked to an area they deem to be
readily defencible, however must remain at least 10 yards from the
ball until it is in play.
Alternative as a Tie-Breaker
The number of corner kicks awarded to each team
has been suggested as an alternative method of tie-breaking to the
current penalty shootout method. The theory behind this suggestion
is that the team which during the course of play has been awarded
the most corner kicks is likely to have dominated play, forcing
their opponents to make more high-risk tackles and their goalkeeper
to make more saves in which he was not able to gain possession of
the ball but rather merely deflect it across the line outside of
the goal or over the crossbar. The use of corner-kick counts as a
tie-breaker has not been approved by the International Football
Association Board, and as such is not used in any high-level
competition. Despite this, this method should never be used at any
level of eleven-a-side football as due to Law 10 (The Method of
Scoring), only the methods stated there are allowed to determine
the result of a game.
Some scoreboards for high school and college
venues in the United States have statistics for fouls, shots on
goal, and corner kicks earned. On American television such
statistics are shown periodically during play for international,
MLS, and other major televised matches.
Source: Wikipedia
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