No. The ball must be handled deliberately for there to be an infraction.
If the player receiving the ball is behind, or level with, the penultimate (second from last) defender when the ball is played, there is no offside. If the player receiving the ball is behind, or level with, the ball at the moment is is played, there is also no offside infraction. But, if the player receiving the ball is ahead of both the ball and the penultimate defender, and is not on his own half of the field, then the offside infraction must be enforced.
You are not guilty of an offside infraction if you receive the ball directly from a throw-in by a team-mate, the defender deflection would still count as "the throw-in" unless they controlled the ball first. Even if they did control the ball, you are not guilty of an offside infraction if an opposing player passed it.
Yes. Only the location of the ball is used to determine whether the touch is an infraction.
It depends on who the infraction is called.
infraction
No. It is a two base infraction. ---------- The above answer is not completely true. The catcher can block the ball with his mask, but if the ball becomes lodged in his mask (or any other part of his equipment), then the ball is dead, and bases are awarded.
Infraction is a noun.
To score six runs, a batsmen must hit the ball over the boundary rope without it coming into contact with the ground. However, it is possible to score six runs if you hit the ball, run for two, and then the ball is overthrown to the boundary for four more runs. It is also possible to score a six by running three, then the ball being overthrown and then running three more or running six runs after hitting the ball
If by "infraction" you mean a traffic infraction, you could answer NO to the misdemeanor.
It is on the offensive side of the ball, across the line of scrimmage. It is called off sides or neutral zone infraction.
Hit it