A player may be guilty of an offside infraction directly from a direct free kick.
A player may be guilty of an offside offense directly from a direct free kick.
A player may not be guilty of an offside offense directly from a throw-in from a team mate.no because there is no offsides on a through in
There are two types of free kicks, direct and indirect. A player may be guilty of an offside offense directly from either type.
A player may not be guilty of an offside offense directly from a goal kick.
A player may be guilty of an offside infraction directly from an indirect free kick.
A player may be guilty of an offside offense directly from an indirect free kick.
A player may not be guilty of an offside offense directly from a corner kick. Goal kicks, corner kicks, and throw-ins are specifically mentioned in Law 11 as exceptions.
A player may not be guilty of an offside infraction directly from a throw-in. Goal kicks, corner kicks, and throw-ins are specifically mentioned in Law 11 as exceptions.
A player may not be guilty of an offside infraction directly from a goal kick. Goal kicks, corner kicks, and throw-ins are specifically mentioned in Law 11 as exceptions.
An player may not be guilty of an offside offense directly from a corner kick. The referee may change their decision about anything until play is restarted.
You can not be guilty of an offside offense when directly receiving a throw-in, goal kick, or corner kick. This does not include any plays stemming from these restarts. Once the ball is controlled by anyone, normal offside rules apply once again.
Interfering with the vision of the goal keeper while in an offside position makes a player guilty of an offside offense.