There are three. There is no offense for receiving the ball directly from a goal kick, corner kick, or a throw-in.
He tells the referee if it's offsides, judges if it's a corner kick or throw in, and fouls
If it weren't for offsides, every time one team had the ball, thay would have the opportunity to score a goal by passing the ball into the box, similar to a corner kick. Basically, it prevents cherrypicking.
No you cannot. In order for a player to be offside, that player has to be behind the ball and behind the 2nd to last defender. On a corner kick, there is no way to be behind the ball unless that player goes off of the field.
No. This is not a cautionable offense. There are other things that can happen simultaneously to the offside call that could be. But being offside would never be a listed reason for a caution.
behind own goal line courtesy of a kick or touch by a team mate, a free kick from the corner would be awarded to the other side, that free kick is called the corner kick
A corner kick.
2nd
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When the ball goes out of play over the backline and was last touched by a defender, the attacking team receives a 'corner kick', where the ball is placed within a yard of the corner post and then taken as a free kick. 'Corner' is short for 'corner kick'.
Only when a foul is committed such as handball or a bad tackle - offsides or back passes are indirect free kicks!
That would depend who took the throw-in. If the throw-in was by the attacking team, then the restart is a goal kick. If the throw-in was by the defending team, then the restart is a corner kick.