An offside offense is punished with an indirect free kick for the opposing team.
Note that the free kick is awarded for the actual offense of offside, not just for being in an offside position--being in an offside position while not participating in play or gaining an advantage is not an offense and doesn't result in any free kick.
If a player is in an offside position when the ball is played through, it is a indirect free kick to the opposing team.
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 be guilty of an offside offense directly from an indirect free kick.
A player may be guilty of an offside infraction directly from an indirect free kick.
An offside goal is one that is scored by an offside player. If the assistant referee is out of position, he may not realize that the scorer is offside and the goal may stand. Usually, however, offside goals are disallowed and the defending team is awarded an indirect free kick.
An offside goal is one that is scored by an offside player. If the assistant referee is out of position, he may not realize that the scorer is offside and the goal may stand. Usually, however, offside goals are disallowed and the defending team is awarded an indirect free kick.
A player may be guilty of an offside offense directly from a direct free kick.
An indirect free kick will be awarded to the opposing team at the location where the player was guilty of the offside infraction.
No. A player is never in an offside position when he is on his own side of the field.
A player may be guilty of an offside infraction directly from a direct free kick.
The restart for an offside offense is an indirect free kick. Another player must touch it for a goal to be scored during an indirect free kick.
No. A player can never be in an offside position while on their own half. A player could be in an offside position in the opponent's half at the time of the touch, run back to their own half to collect it, and be guilty of an offside offense. The officials would wait and see what the player did once they were determined to be in an offside state.