Ted Hughes wrote:I've had some spare time this morning & found something which some of you probably knew already but were too polite to mention; that the bit about 'distracting an opponent' which I have been quoting, has been amended out of the 'offside' law.
Therefore, as Neville, Poll, Gallagher etc have stated, the player would have to be preventing an opponent from playing (or being able to) play the ball by clearly obstructing his view, or challenging for the ball, (which Valencia did for Utd's 'goal').
Otherwise: you can't be offside; 'distraction of an opponent' has been taken out.
As far as 'gaining an advantage' is concerned, the bloke has to play the ball or it doesn't count.
So you can do basically ANYTHING if it isn't close enough to an opponent to impede him.
Where is Fat Sam ? He should be all over this on the training ground, as should Pulis.
But here is a question: why do linos frequently flag when a player in an offside position turns & runs toward the ball ? They don't always wait for him to touch it, only sometimes. He can stand next to the ball until an opponent or team mate arrives & he is not offside. He hasn't challenged for it.
There is no rule to cover this.
Similarly, when Yaya Toure lines up to take a free kick, a City player can stand on or in front of the goal line provided he fucks off before the keeper gets close enough to be impeded. Another one can stand in front of the keeper provided he is not close enough to impede him & he can see the ball.
There is no rule to cover this.
If I was a manager, the next few games would be fucking interesting.
Sister of fu wrote:I think to make it clearer it should be, if you are offside you are offside, no shady grey bits that can be interpreted differently by different people. It should be black and white. If you are stood in an offside position, like three were on Sunday then its offside. What is wrong with this??
Sister of fu wrote:I think to make it clearer it should be, if you are offside you are offside, no shady grey bits that can be interpreted differently by different people. It should be black and white. If you are stood in an offside position, like three were on Sunday then its offside. What is wrong with this??
Wonderwall wrote:I would certainly use it to our advantage until that is done
Burt wrote:Ted Hughes wrote:I've had some spare time this morning & found something which some of you probably knew already but were too polite to mention; that the bit about 'distracting an opponent' which I have been quoting, has been amended out of the 'offside' law.
Therefore, as Neville, Poll, Gallagher etc have stated, the player would have to be preventing an opponent from playing (or being able to) play the ball by clearly obstructing his view, or challenging for the ball, (which Valencia did for Utd's 'goal').
Otherwise: you can't be offside; 'distraction of an opponent' has been taken out.
As far as 'gaining an advantage' is concerned, the bloke has to play the ball or it doesn't count.
So you can do basically ANYTHING if it isn't close enough to an opponent to impede him.
Where is Fat Sam ? He should be all over this on the training ground, as should Pulis.
But here is a question: why do linos frequently flag when a player in an offside position turns & runs toward the ball ? They don't always wait for him to touch it, only sometimes. He can stand next to the ball until an opponent or team mate arrives & he is not offside. He hasn't challenged for it.
There is no rule to cover this.
Similarly, when Yaya Toure lines up to take a free kick, a City player can stand on or in front of the goal line provided he fucks off before the keeper gets close enough to be impeded. Another one can stand in front of the keeper provided he is not close enough to impede him & he can see the ball.
There is no rule to cover this.
If I was a manager, the next few games would be fucking interesting.
Fat Bastard Sam actually deployed this tactic with Nolan lots of times last season didn't he Ted?
Alex Sapphire wrote:Wonderwall wrote:I would certainly use it to our advantage until that is done
isn't that excatly what Pardew (or at least Gouffran) was doing and that didn't go well did it?
Slim wrote:Why not just have someone stand in the goal and scream in the keeper's ear as the kick is taken.
Beefymcfc wrote:Anybody got the actual policy wording/quote?
zabbadabbado wrote:simple, active or passive.
3 opposition players stood in an offside position in our penalty area. Our keeper says they restricted his view, and prevented him making a save. End of debate, no need to over analyze any further player is active.
It was the only thing the referee got right.
Sister of fu wrote:I think to make it clearer it should be, if you are offside you are offside, no shady grey bits that can be interpreted differently by different people. It should be black and white. If you are stood in an offside position, like three were on Sunday then its offside. What is wrong with this??
DoomMerchant wrote:zabbadabbado wrote:simple, active or passive.
3 opposition players stood in an offside position in our penalty area. Our keeper says they restricted his view, and prevented him making a save. End of debate, no need to over analyze any further player is active.
It was the only thing the referee got right.
how can a player who is 2 yards from the keeper and in the direct path of the ball not be changing the course of play as it relates to his offside/onside-ability? A keeper can't be arsed to judge his spatial situation in regards to the CBs in a nanosecond and afford to ignore that player, can he? A: No.
Also, do women know these rules? Times is hard.
cheers
Not sure what your are getting at tbh.DoomMerchant wrote:zabbadabbado wrote:simple, active or passive.
3 opposition players stood in an offside position in our penalty area. Our keeper says they restricted his view, and prevented him making a save. End of debate, no need to over analyze any further player is active.
It was the only thing the referee got right.
how can a player who is 2 yards from the keeper and in the direct path of the ball not be changing the course of play as it relates to his offside/onside-ability? A keeper can't be arsed to judge his spatial situation in regards to the CBs in a nanosecond and afford to ignore that player, can he? A: No.
Also, do women know these rules? Times is hard.
cheers
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