The penalties in Netball are contact and obstruction, intimidation also comes under the category of these two penalties.
It depends if you are playing proper netball or nettaball (younger players netball). In netball it is offside.
When they are offside they are in an area which there position is not allowed. for example GS is not allowed in the centre third. and C is not allowed in the shorting circle...
offside absolutely offside k IF U DON;T NOOOOOOOOOOO
The ball is given to the opposing team, the penalty is taken from the sense of the infringement
the penalties in net of moving or steppiing, offside, over a thirdand contact
Usually a toss up would be done or play could continue normal if neither player affected the game. Just depends on the umpire, they might even see only one player go offside and award a free pass to the opposing team.
In MLS they use the offside markers to see if a player is offside
The ball cannot be offside. Players can be in an offside position.
No. A player cannot be offside directly from a goal kick.
No. Merely returning to an onside position is not enough. Once a player is determined to be offside two things must happen to fix it: 1. That player must get back to an onside position ...and... 2. a team-mate must touch the ball, an opponent must control the ball, or the ball must leave play.
The original offside rule was that if any attacking player is ahead of the last defender when the ball is played then the attacking player must be given offside. The player must be given offside even if he doesn't receive the pass. The new rule is that the player can only be given offside if he is interfering with play i.e. he receives the ball, he obstructs defending players, blcoks the goalkeepers view, etc.
In the tackle scenarion. When a ruck, maul, scrum or lineout forms, a player who is offside and is retiring as required by Law remains offside even when the opposing team wins possession and the ruck, maul, scrum or lineout has ended. The player is put onside by retiring behind the applicable offside line. No other action of the offside player and no action of that player's team mates can put the offside player onside. If the player remains offside the player can be put onside only by the action of the opposing team. There are two such actions: An Opponent runs 5 metres with ball. When an opponent carrying the ball has run 5 metres, the offside player is put onside. An offside player is not put onside when an opponent passes the ball. Even if the opponents pass the ball several times, their action does not put the offside player onside. An Opponent kicks. When an opponent kicks the ball, the offside player is put onside. Related links will take you to the IRB rules covering the range of offside and on side regulations