There are some soccer rules that are not well understood, especially if you are new to soccer. The following are explanations for the most commonly misunderstood rules.
Handling
Offside
Ball Out of Play
Shoulder Tackle
Advantage Rule
Indirect Kick
Slide Tackle
HANDLING (Law 12 - Fouls and Misconduct)
HANDLING is when, in the referee's judgement, a player uses his/her arms deliberately intending to control the ball or has placed his/her arms up where contact with the ball is likely. The key word is deliberate.
• 'Hand' includes all of the arm from the fingers to the shoulder.
• Does not apply to goalkeeper in own penalty area.
• Instinctive, self-protection reactions are not penalized in younger players.
The following 'handball situations, even if accidental, will be a free kick:
•the ball goes into the goal after touching an attacking player's hand/arm
•a player gains control/possession of the ball after it has touched their hand/arm and then scores, or creates a goal-scoring opportunity
•the ball touches a player's hand/arm which has made their body unnaturally bigger
•the ball touches a player's hand/arm when it is above their shoulder (unless the player has deliberately played the ball which then touches their hand/arm)
The following will not usually be a free kick, unless they are one of the above situations:
•the ball touches a player's hand/arm directly from their own head/body/foot or the head/body/foot of another player who is close/near
•the ball touches a player's hand/arm which is close to their body and has not made their body unnaturally bigger
•if a player is falling and the ball touches their hand/arm when it is between their body and the ground to support the body
•if the goalkeeper attempts to 'clear' (release into play) a throw-in or deliberate kick from a team-mate but the 'clearance' fails, the goalkeeper can then handle the ball
The Referee is the sole judge of whether or not a player deliberately handles the ball.
A DFK (Direct Free Kick) is awarded when a hand ball foul is committed.
OFFSIDE (Law 11): Remember - it's 'Offside' not 'Offsides'.
This is a hard to understand rule as it involves multiple parts. A player is offside when:
1. They are past the second-to-last defender (goalie is the last defender)
2. The attacker is in the opposing half (cannot be offside in your own half)
3. The call is made based on the players position at the moment the ball was passed
4. The player is actively involved in the play
OFFSIDE POSITION and OFFSIDE are not the same. It is not against the rules to be merely in an offside position. It is against the rules to be offside.
OFFSIDE POSITION - A player is in an offside position if:
• the player is in the opponents' half of the field, and
• the player is closer to the opponents' goal line than both the ball and the second last opponent.
A player is not in an offside position if the player is:
• in his or her own half of the field of play, or
• even with or behind the ball, or
• even with the second-to-last opponent, or the last two opponents.
OFFSIDE - With certain exceptions, a player in an offside position becomes offside if, at the moment the ball touches or is played by a teammate, the player, in the opinion of the referee, is involved in active play by:
• interfering with play, or
• interfering with an opponent, or
• gaining an advantage by being in that offside position
EXCEPTIONS - Although in an offside position, a player is not offside if the player receives the ball directly from a:
• goal kick, or
• throw-in, or
• corner kick
The position of the player at the moment the ball is played by a teammate determines whether the player may be called offside. For example, a player positioned onside at the moment the ball is played by a teammate does not become offside by running to an offside position while the ball is in flight.
The Referee may or may not declare a violation of the Offside Law depending upon his/her judgement of the circumstances.
BALL OUT of PLAY (Law 9):
The ball is out of play when:
• it has wholly passed over the goal line or touchline on the ground or in the air or
• play has been stopped by the referee.
The ball is in play at all other times, including when it rebounds off a match official, goalpost, crossbar or corner flag post and remains in the field of play.
It is the position of the ball, and not that of the player, which determines when the ball is out of play. This concept is foreign since the reverse is true in other popular sports such as football and basketball. It is also sometimes difficult to resist the temptation to think that the ball is out of play when it touches a goal line or touch line, but we need to remember that the entire ball must cross the line before it is out.
The ball is out of bounds on the person it touches last, not the last person to kick it.
The throw in goes to the opposing team.
SHOULDER TACKLE (Charging):
Soccer is a contact sport and sometime physical contact is specifically allowed. A shoulder tackle is where two opposing players are running near a playable ball, and one uses shoulder-to-shoulder contact to push his opponent off the ball. This is a non-reckless "fair charge" and perfectly legal.
ADVANTAGE RULE:
The advantage rule is when the referee allows play to go on despite a minor foul, when it is to the advantage of the team in possession. This is sometimes confused with the referee missing a foul.
An example would be where a defender pushes an attacking player who then falls, but the attacking team keeps the ball and is in position to score. Calling the foul would actually hurt the attacking team.
INDIRECT KICK:
In a game, a foul is called, and players set up for a free kick. The attacking team shoots, and the ball goes directly into the net. The referee indicates "No Goal" and the defending team gets the ball. What happened?
An indirect free kick is given for non-reckless fouls or rule violations. The free kick is awarded but, in this case, must touch another player before a goal can be scored.
SLIDE TACKLE:
A slide tackle is a perfectly legal play in 12U and up divisions. A foul can be called when the play is dangerous, like when the defender makes contact with the opponent before he/she makes contact with the ball, or make the tackle 'cleats up'.
Region 75 does not allow slide tackling in 5U, 6U, 7U or 8U because players in these younger age groups lack the skills to consistently do it the correct way, and have increased risk of injury.