The ball is given to the opposing team, the penalty is taken from the sense of the infringement
Yes, usually un-less the umpire is picky, you can take the penaly pass on either side of the penalised player,
The penalties in netball are contact and obstruction, intimidation also comes under the category of these two penalties.
Yes, but only with an indirect free kick for the opposing team.
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...
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.
there is offsides in rugby just tell you weird people
Netball is considered non contact - however it was recently rated the third highest contact sport. This is because as the player is penalised when pulled up for contacting, the contact is made more aggressive (the logic is "if you're going to do it you might as well do it properly").
If a player of a team is on the other side of the field behind all the players (or behind the defenders) but still in front of the goalie, then this person is in an offside position. This, however, is NOT offside. It is not against the law of soccer to be in an offside position. Now say that person is in an offside position and his/her teammate passed the ball to him/her and that person plays or touches the ball, that is considered offside. That is illegal in the law of soccer. Say the other teammate passed the ball to his/her teammate in an offside position but the person doesn't make a move to go for the ball, then that isn't considered offsides, and therefor is not considered illegal in the law of soccer. A player in an offside position is only penalised if, at the moment the ball touches or is played by one of their team, they are , in the opinion of the referee, involved in active play by: > interfering with play > interfering with an opponent > gaining an advantage by being in that position In doing this the attacking player will between the last defender and the defending goalkeeper when the ball is played to them . If the attacking player is in line with a defending player (not the goalkeeper) then no offside offence has been committed
Yes, there is an offside penalty in American Football. The neutral zone is defined as the area extending from the tip of the football to each side of the field, so the neutral zone is as wide as the length of the football. No player, except the center, may have any part of his body in the neutral zone at the time the ball is snapped, otherwise they are guilty of being offside. On a kickoff, no player may have any part of his body across the line upon which the ball rests prior to the kick, except for the holder if one is used. The penalty for offside is 5 yards.
A free pass is taken when the other team: steps (the player is not out of play), contacts (the player is out of play), obstructs (the player is out of play), holds the ball (the player is not out of play), throws the ball over a third (no-one is out of play) or steps offside (the player is not out of play, I think).
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.