Anonymous wrote:As a referee the calls which I have incorrectly challenged the most are Off Side and Handling.
Handling is only an offense if it's deliberate or creates a goal--I get parents whining nearly every time the ball gets kicked into someone's hand.
There are so many ways people are confused about the off side law it's impossible to catalog them all.
The other nutty one I hear all the time is "But she got the ball" as if that somehow absolves her of all wrong![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm talking about deliberately running up to the ball, not standing at 8 yards thinking he's at 10. A player knows that it's 10 yards. It's delaying the restart of a game. Usually a ref gives a warning but doesn't have to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You this all the time. Someone gets fouled and a kid from the other team runs up to the ball to prevent the team from a quick restart. That is a yellow card. Rarely given.
Yeah but isn't it the referees job to determine how far ten yards is? As long as the player doesn't touch the ball he can ask the referee to mark off the 10 yrds so he knows far it he has to be.
Im with you on that. I still think its grey area loophole in the rule. The player can stand 2 yrds away and ask the ref for for the proper yardage. I agree not very sportsman like but can be used a great tactical move occasionally. The defender has the right to ask the ref to mark off the ten yards putting the onus on the ref to determine. I agree the way its written its a delay of game . I also think its hard to enforce
Anonymous wrote:I'm talking about deliberately running up to the ball, not standing at 8 yards thinking he's at 10. A player knows that it's 10 yards. It's delaying the restart of a game. Usually a ref gives a warning but doesn't have to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You this all the time. Someone gets fouled and a kid from the other team runs up to the ball to prevent the team from a quick restart. That is a yellow card. Rarely given.
Yeah but isn't it the referees job to determine how far ten yards is? As long as the player doesn't touch the ball he can ask the referee to mark off the 10 yrds so he knows far it he has to be.
I'm talking about deliberately running up to the ball, not standing at 8 yards thinking he's at 10. A player knows that it's 10 yards. It's delaying the restart of a game. Usually a ref gives a warning but doesn't have to.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You this all the time. Someone gets fouled and a kid from the other team runs up to the ball to prevent the team from a quick restart. That is a yellow card. Rarely given.
Yeah but isn't it the referees job to determine how far ten yards is? As long as the player doesn't touch the ball he can ask the referee to mark off the 10 yrds so he knows far it he has to be.
Anonymous wrote:You this all the time. Someone gets fouled and a kid from the other team runs up to the ball to prevent the team from a quick restart. That is a yellow card. Rarely given.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Offside rule.
Direct vs. indirect free kick
Handling the ball (not straight forward and very subjective)
Out of bounds. (Ball has to be completely over the line. Touching the line and on the line is still inbounds.)
Yellow and red cards.
Thanks But do you have an specific things that people get wrong with offsides? Like I know the attacker can't be beyond the 2nd to last defender when the ball is played. What do some people get wrong with that?
What do some people think is an indirect kick but is really a direct kick?
What do people think is a yellow card but is really a Red card?
Things like this. I understand that I can just read all the rules but I guess I'm looking for "common misconceptions". Thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Offside rule.
Direct vs. indirect free kick
Handling the ball (not straight forward and very subjective)
Out of bounds. (Ball has to be completely over the line. Touching the line and on the line is still inbounds.)
Yellow and red cards.
Anonymous wrote:Offside rule.
Direct vs. indirect free kick
Handling the ball (not straight forward and very subjective)
Out of bounds. (Ball has to be completely over the line. Touching the line and on the line is still inbounds.)
Yellow and red cards.