Offside: A Primer for Coaches, Fans, and Players
by Jeffrey Caminsky
For many, soccer�s offside rule is, as Churchill once described Russia, a
�mystery, wrapped in a riddle, inside an enigma.� Therefore, in a modest, and
probably misguided effort to make the rule understandable, I have tried to
analyze the concept of �Offside� from the observer�s perspective, in order to
correct some common misconceptions about the Rule�s purpose and application. We
will deal with any new misconceptions this article creates at a later time.
The Purpose of the Offside Rule
Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players:
The Main Purpose of the Offside Rule is to give the officials an excuse to take
away any goal our team scores.
A Secondary Purpose of the rule is to let the officials give the other team a
breakaway, and let them score whenever they pass the ball behind our defenders.
Reality Check:
Officials do not like to disallow goals. They realize how hard each team works
for any goal it scores, and will only disallow a goal when a team scores by
exploiting a violation of the rules. In addition, the Referee does not really
care which team wins.
The Real Reason for the Offside Rule
The purpose of the Offside Rule is the same in Soccer as it is in hockey � to
prevent �cherry-picking� by a player who is too lazy to participate in the
actual game, and instead camps in front of the other team�s goal, hoping for a
long pass so he doesn�t have to move around very much. Without the Offside Rule,
Soccer would be a large field game of ping pong, filled with long kicks and
alternating mad scrambles from one end of the field to the other. By preventing
any �offside� player from participating in the game, the rule puts a premium on
dribbling and passing, rather than long kicks. This promotes teamwork, which, in
turn, encourages quick switching from one side of the field to the other, and
compresses the action to a smaller area of the field � usually about 30 or 40
yards long. The end result is that all the players stay closer to the action,
and everyone has a better chance of participating in the game.
The Offside Rule:
A player in an offside position is only penalized if, at the moment the ball
touches or is played by one of his team, he is, in the opinion of the referee,
involved in active play by interfering with play, or interfering with an
opponent, or gaining an advantage by being in that position.
�Offside Position�
Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players:
A player is �Offside� whenever he gets past our defenders. The officials will
not notice this, however, unless we bring it to their attention by screaming at
them.
Reality Check:
The rule is a bit more complicated than this...but there is at least one
official watching the offside line at any given time. However, occasionally the
Referee�s attention is on the contest for the ball, instead of the official
watching the offside line, which sometimes results in a late whistle.
The �Offside Position�:
Law 11 states that a player is in an �offside position� whenever �he is nearer
to his opponent�s goal than both the ball and the second last opponent,� unless
�he is in his own half of the field of play.� Put more simply:
� Nobody can be �offside� in his own half of the field.
� Nobody can be �offside� if even with, or behind the ball.
� Nobody can be �offside� if even with, or behind two or more opponents.
In addition, there are three major exceptions to the offside rule. Anyone
receiving a ball directly from a throw-in, a corner kick, or a goal kick, cannot
be �offside.� So, if Sally receives the ball directly from her teammate�s
throw-in, it doesn�t matter if she is in an offside position. The fact that it
was a throw-in means that the play was not offside. However, if she flicks the
ball along to Jane, who is even further downfield than Sally was, Jane can be
offside, since she received the ball from Sally, rather than from the throw-in.
The same holds true for corner kicks and goal kicks, as well. If the ball comes
directly from the restart, the play cannot be offside; but once the first player
receives the ball, the �offside� rule comes back into play.
�Involved in Active Play�
Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players:
Referees often use the phrase �not involved in the play� as an excuse to avoid
admitting they missed an offside call. If the players on the other team were not
�involved in active play,� they would not be on the field, they would be on the
sidelines.
Reality Check:
A good referee tries to stop the game only when necessary � usually, only for a
serious injury, or when one team would otherwise gain an advantage by a
violation of the rules.
Contrary to popular misconceptions, it is not a violation of the rules merely
for a player to be in an offside position. The violation comes only when an
�offside� player becomes involved in the play. So the referee � or the assistant
referee on the sidelines � who allows play to continue despite the fact that
everyone can see a player well beyond the offside line is probably not missing
anything. Rather, they are probably applying the rule correctly, by allowing
play to continue until such time as the player in the �offside position� becomes
�offside� by getting involved in the play.
�Involved in Active Play�
There are three � and only three � situations where someone in an offside
position is penalized for being �offside.� All of them, however, require
participating in play from an offside position � or, in the wording of the rule,
becoming �involved in active play�in one of three ways:
� Interfering with play
� Interfering with an opponent, or
� Gaining an advantage by being in an offside position.
The easiest example of �offside� comes when an offside player receives a pass
from a teammate. In this case, he is directly �interfering with play� because he
got the ball. Other examples of the same principle apply this same logic, but
seek to spare the players a few steps, or the coaches and fans a few heart
attacks. So, if one or more attackers is trapped offside and running to play the
ball, the play will be �offside.� (Some sadistic or mischievous assistant
referees may prefer to wait until the player actually touches the ball in order
to raise the flag. This is not, strictly speaking, necessary; but it is not
incorrect for them to do so, either...providing some incentive, however meager,
to be nice to them). On the other hand, if an offside player removes himself
from the play � pulling up, for example, in order to let an onside teammate
collect the ball � an alert official will allow play to continue. And if the
ball is going directly to the keeper, the officials will usually let the players
keep playing.
While it is not an offense to be in an offside position, a player who never
touches the ball may nevertheless affect play in such a way as to be penalized
for being offside. The offside player who runs between an opponent and the ball,
for example � or one who screens the goalkeeper from a shot, or interferes with
the keeper�s ability to jump for, or collect the ball � violates the offside
rule by participating in the play. But this sort of participation does not come
from touching the ball. Rather, it comes from interfering with an opponent�s
chance to play the ball. In this case, once the assistant referee sees the
participation, the appropriate response is to raise the flag. But, if the
offside player pulls up, steps to the side, or clearly indicates that he is
removing himself from the moment�s active play, the alert official will simply
allow play to continue.
Among the trickiest things to spot � either as a spectator or an official � is
the player who exploits an offside position to gain an unfair advantage. This
does not mean that the player is �gaining an advantage� by avoiding some extra
running on a hot day, however. Instead, it means that the player is taking
advantage of his positioning to exploit a lucky deflection, or a defensive
mistake. So, if an offside player is standing to the side of the goal when his
teammate takes a shot � but does not otherwise interfere with play or inhibit
the keeper�s chance to make the save � then he is not offside...and the
officials will count the goal. But if the ball rebounds, either from the keeper
or the goalpost, and the offside player bangs the rebound home � the play is
offside, and the goal will not count, because the player is now gaining an
advantage from the offside position.
�The Moment the Ball is Played....�
Perception of Coaches, Fans, and Players:
The referees never get the offside call right, and have a hard time making up
their minds. That�s why their flags are often late. And that�s why they
sometimes raise the offside flag even when the players are clearly onside.
Reality Check
The Offside rule is the source of more controversy than any other rule in
soccer, and for good reason: it�s pretty complicated. In addition, there are at
least two critical moments of judgment in every offside call, or no-call. The
second of these, the moment of participation, is often easy to see: that�s
usually where the ball lands and the players are playing, and that�s where
everybody is looking. But the first �moment of truth� is usually away from
everyone�s attention, because what determines the �offside position� is the
relative position of each player at the moment the ball is struck.
�The moment the ball touches, or is played, by a teammate....�
Players touch the ball a lot during a soccer game, sometimes in very rapid
succession. And soccer being a fluid game, on a good team each player is
constantly in motion. This means that the first moment of judgment � determining
whether any players are in an offside position � is constantly changing, and the
relative position of the players will often be very different from one moment to
the next. Yet the officials have to keep it all straight, and have a heartbeat
or less to take a mental snapshot of the players� positioning at one frozen
moment in time � the moment the ball is played by a member of one team � in
order to judge whether an offside member of that team subsequently moves to play
the ball, interferes with an opponent, or gains an advantage from being offside.
From the official�s perspective, the game is an endless series of these
snapshots, because each new touch of the ball redetermines the offside line.
Part of the difficulty in this is simple physics. Imagine that you are watching
cars pass one another on the highway. It may seem easy to tell when one car is
passing another in the two northbound lanes of traffic; but try telling the
precise moment that a car traveling north is exactly even with a car traveling
south. Now, combine this with the need make your decision at the precise moment
that some other northbound car flashes its brights, and you get a pretty good
idea of what the officials have to do, dozens of times in every game. If the
cars are even, or the northbound car has not quite passed the one heading south
at the moment the third car flashes its brights, the play is onside; if the
northbound car has nosed ahead of the southbound car, the play is offside. Now,
widen the highway to twenty lanes...increase the number of cars to
twenty-two...set them all moving in different directions and at varying
speeds...tell the assistant referee to stay even with the �next to last car�...
and if you can keep track of it all, you�re doing what the referees are doing
every moment of the game. Just remember � the official has to make each decision
in a heartbeat.
But what really seems to confuse everyone is more a matter of psychology and
perception. Suppose everyone is watching the car with the lights. When its
brights flash, everyone turns to see the northbound car racing ahead, and by the
time they turn their heads, it�s well past the southbound car, racing north as
fast as the speed limit allows. In a soccer game, substitute players for cars,
and the ball for the lights, and whichever way the call goes, this is the moment
that half the crowd will often start screaming at the officials. But in fact,
nobody but the assistant referee has any idea what the call should be, because
nobody, except the one, lonely official, was watching the right players at the
critical moment.
The important thing to remember is that the moment of judging �offside position�
is different than the moment of judging participation. And this is true
whichever direction the players are moving. An offside player who comes back
onside to receive the ball is still offside; to avoid the call, he cannot
participate until another teammate touches the ball, or his opponents manage to
collect it. On the other hand, a player who is onside will remain onside, no
matter how far she runs to retrieve it, and no matter where the other team�s
players move in the meantime. So, if Judy is onside when Stacey kicks the ball
forward, it doesn�t matter if she�s twenty yards behind the defense when she
collects the ball. The play will be onside...because she was onside at the
moment her teammate passed the ball. And if Judy is onside...but Mary is
offside...then an alert official will wait to see which one of them moves after
the ball � because if Mary takes herself out of the play, and lets Judy collect
it, then play can continue because there is no offside violation.
Soccer Officials and Offside
The offside rule has been part of Soccer for a long time, and has generated
arguments and controversies since its inception. But its purpose is simple: to
prevent �cherry-picking.� And since it is an important part of the game, the
match officials will enforce the rule to the best of their ability. So when the
officials rule a play offside � or let play continue, because they saw no
infraction � they are not doing it out of spite, or to hurt one team or the
other. Rather, they are doing so regardless of which team it hurts or benefits,
simply because the rules require it.
Officials have a difficult and sometimes thankless job. They have to enforce the
rules, even if nobody else understands them, in order for the players to have a
fair contest of skill. But the officials are there because they have no interest
in the outcome, only a deep respect for the sport, and a willingness to run
about the field, occasionally enduring unkind or uninformed remarks so that
others can play a game they all love.
Knowing the rules can help coaches, players, and spectators understand the
decisions the officials hand down during the match, as they try to keep the game
fair, safe, and enjoyable for everybody. And occasionally, understanding the
rules may spare everyone some needless grief, when a call goes against your
favorite team.
�2007 by Jeffrey Caminsky (Reproduced
with kind permission from Jeff Caminsky)