Officially there is no such thing as an offside goal. If an offside infraction has occurred, then play is stopped at that moment of time. Therefore, no action that follows except for the restart of play officially pertains to the outcome of the match.
In popular culture, an offside goal most likely refers to a ball that crosses the touch line, between the goal posts and below the cross bar by a player who interfered in play while in the offside position. This is prohibited and the goal will not count as a point.
No, the offside rule does not apply within the goal box in soccer.
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.
It can't be
No. A player cannot be offside directly from a goal 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 who is behind the ball cannot be in an offside position. A player that is in an offside position at the moment of the kick would be guilty of an offense if he runs back to collect a pass, even if the pass was backward.
A goal keeper punt may score a goal. There are no restrictions on this in the FIFA Laws of the Game.
It is impossible to tell which goal you are referring to. I assume he has scored more than one.
Where the offside positioned player was at the moment their team-mate last touched the ball. If that spot is within the opponent's goal area, then the ball is brought straight out along a line perpendicular to the goal line to the "top" of the goal area (a.k.a. 6 yard line).
Yes, you can be called offside on direct free kicks and indirect free kicks. You cannot be offside on a throw-in, goal kick, corner kick, or kickoff, though.
No, a player cannot be offside from a back pass. Offside rules only apply when an attacking player receives the ball from a teammate who is playing the ball forward. A back pass, which is when the ball is played to a teammate who is closer to their own goal, does not trigger the offside rule.
In soccer, the offside rule states that a player is offside if they are closer to the opponent's goal line than both the ball and the second-to-last defender (usually the goalkeeper) at the moment the ball is played to them.