Spain v Turkey 3rd goal

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Are u Turkish?0
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Why is Turkey keeper wearing same shirt as the outfield players?0
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Not Turkish just confused. Forward pass, no-one between the scorer and the goal. Isn't that offside?Redhenry said:Are u Turkish?
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Definitely offside, but it's Spain so you can't stop beautiful football or even notice it, if you are paid thousands of pounds to commentate on it!!1
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Yeah it was odd. A beautifully worked goal but was offside & it wasn't even mentioned2
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Not offside. He was actually slightly behind Iniesta when Iniesta passed to him. So, even though he was ahead of the last defender, he wasn't ahead of the ball.1
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the rule has changed a lot over the years but that's never been offside2
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Onside.3 -
the pass before that one was where the offside was5
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He was offside. Great move though.1
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He's behind iniesta when iniesta passes the ball, lost count the number of times these types of goal have been disallowed on a Saturday and Sunday when I've been playing..
If that's the pass your on about, onside, always has been.1 -
The law does not say the ball has to be passed forward.
Look it up.0 -
How sad am I. I can still quote the offside law word-for-word from my days of refereeing (the terminology has since changed but the sentiments are the same) - "A player is off-side if he is nearer his opponents goal-line than the ball when it was last played; except, if he receives the ball from a corner, goal-kick, throw-in (and used to be drop ball), or he is in his own half of the field of play.
Seth is correct - you can be off-side if the ball is played backwards. Explanations later if nobody fails to work it out!0 -
Utterly brilliant move, the way they keep the ball constantly moving is great to watch. Obviously not a comparison but when Poyet came into the team a couple of years ago he brought some of that to us, God knows what happened to him this year.1
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The Vardy goal was an interesting angle on the offside shenanigans. When I was a kid that kind of event would be described as goal hanging.0
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I thought Iniesta was offside when he received the ball so, my thought was they were both offside. Not that it affected the result. PS I was never a referee but I did argue with them a lot.1
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It would be unusual if the intended receiving player was in front of the ball, but the ball was played backwards by the other player! It would be a fairly rubbish pass really as it would go nowhere near him!PeterGage said:How sad am I. I can still quote the offside law word-for-word from my days of refereeing (the terminology has since changed but the sentiments are the same) - "A player is off-side if he is nearer his opponents goal-line than the ball when it was last played; except, if he receives the ball from a corner, goal-kick, throw-in (and used to be drop ball), or he is in his own half of the field of play.
Seth is correct - you can be off-side if the ball is played backwards. Explanations later if nobody fails to work it out!0 -
"It would be unusual if the intended receiving player was in front of the ball, but the ball was played backwards by the other player! It would be a fairly rubbish pass really as it would go nowhere near him!"
Those were the passes I got all the time!1 -
Pretty close to the answer - A forward (player A) is in an onside position with the ball, sees his colleague (playerkillerandflash said:
It would be unusual if the intended receiving player was in front of the ball, but the ball was played backwards by the other player! It would be a fairly rubbish pass really as it would go nowhere near him!PeterGage said:How sad am I. I can still quote the offside law word-for-word from my days of refereeing (the terminology has since changed but the sentiments are the same) - "A player is off-side if he is nearer his opponents goal-line than the ball when it was last played; except, if he receives the ball from a corner, goal-kick, throw-in (and used to be drop ball), or he is in his own half of the field of play.
Seth is correct - you can be off-side if the ball is played backwards. Explanations later if nobody fails to work it out!in a more advance position but offside. Player A plays the ball across the goalmouth (but in a backwards trajectory), and player B moves backwards and intercepts the ball. Being offside when the ball was played, the referee rightly call player B off-side.
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I imagine that scenario might happen if player A passed the ball across and backwards for player C (who was behind the ball), but player B ran back to receive it instead!PeterGage said:
Pretty close to the answer - A forward (player A) is in an onside position with the ball, sees his colleague (playerkillerandflash said:
It would be unusual if the intended receiving player was in front of the ball, but the ball was played backwards by the other player! It would be a fairly rubbish pass really as it would go nowhere near him!PeterGage said:How sad am I. I can still quote the offside law word-for-word from my days of refereeing (the terminology has since changed but the sentiments are the same) - "A player is off-side if he is nearer his opponents goal-line than the ball when it was last played; except, if he receives the ball from a corner, goal-kick, throw-in (and used to be drop ball), or he is in his own half of the field of play.
Seth is correct - you can be off-side if the ball is played backwards. Explanations later if nobody fails to work it out!in a more advance position but offside. Player A plays the ball across the goalmouth (but in a backwards trajectory), and player B moves backwards and intercepts the ball. Being offside when the ball was played, the referee rightly call player B off-side.
Player B would then get a real earbashing from his colleagues!0 -
You can get these kinds of offsides following a short corner.0