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What do we think?
That wasn’t the questionI’m ok with this not being overruled when the on field decision is offside
I think that is the whole point of the difference in standards among blocking vision, a clear action, and an attempt to play the ball. On an attempt to play the ball, any impact on an opponent is enough to create the offense. I havn’t seen a clip, but as described, this doesn’t sound like a hard call—it’s an offside offense.The LOTG pamphlet needs to add that 'attempting to touch/play' the ball or a 'feint' to play it is equivalent to touching/playing the ball and is therefore offside. In the absence of this, it's very unclear what is meant by 'impact' when impact is a measure of distraction
It takes a lack of historical understanding of OS to make that statement. This used to be so blatantly obviously OS that no one would even have a second thought. Over the last 20 years, what is enough to constitute active involvement and be an offense has been significantly whittled down to eliminate scenarios where the OSP player has no impact on the play. (The whittling actually goes back even farther to the elimination of “seeking to gain an advantage from Law 11, to making even I. Instead of off, and even farther back to moving from 3 defenders required to 2.) Anyone saying this scenario has no impact on the GK is being naive. Yes, the OSP attacker merely being there has an impact on how the GK plays as someone noted above. But we give that attacker a get out of jail free card despite that impact so long as he doesn’t try to do anything to affect the play. Once he attempts the ball, he loses that forgiveness and is properly sanctioned for being OS.Football is turning into a bit anti-goal, toenail offside etc, does the game want more goals?
Am I missing something, you haven’t seen the clip but your view is it doesn't sound a hard call, offside?I think that is the whole point of the difference in standards among blocking vision, a clear action, and an attempt to play the ball. On an attempt to play the ball, any impact on an opponent is enough to create the offense. I havn’t seen a clip, but as described, this doesn’t sound like a hard call—it’s an offside offense.
It takes a lack of historical understanding of OS to make that statement. This used to be so blatantly obviously OS that no one would even have a second thought. Over the last 20 years, what is enough to constitute active involvement and be an offense has been significantly whittled down to eliminate scenarios where the OSP player has no impact on the play. (The whittling actually goes back even farther to the elimination of “seeking to gain an advantage from Law 11, to making even I. Instead of off, and even farther back to moving from 3 defenders required to 2.) Anyone saying this scenario has no impact on the GK is being naive. Yes, the OSP attacker merely being there has an impact on how the GK plays as someone noted above. But we give that attacker a get out of jail free card despite that impact so long as he doesn’t try to do anything to affect the play. Once he attempts the ball, he loses that forgiveness and is properly sanctioned for being OS.
That would explain why I very clearly noted that my opinion was as described.Am I missing something, you haven’t seen the clip but your view is it doesn't sound a hard call, offside?