The Ref Stop

Offsides

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Johnners

New Member
Maybe this should be in the New Refs forum but it arose in a game today. I’m in my first season refereeing, and so far so good, I’m enjoying it. Youth level, U-12s to U-16s.

I have a question about offsides. In only the second game I reffed back in August, I was told off by an 11-year old for blowing for offside because he told me his teammate hadn’t been active and hadn’t touched the ball. As the lad who was offside was chasing with the centre-half hot on his heels with nobody else close I thought the whistle was justified.

However, since then I have tended to delay blowing the whistle until the player in an offside position has touched the ball or made a challenge on a defender. In some cases that has meant ignoring a chorus of “Offside Ref!” shouts from the sideline until the player has definitely become ’active’.

Then I had an incident today where a player in an offside position was chasing a through ball and delayed the whistle, but the defending team’s goalie was really quick off his line and the two crashed into each other. The keeper came off worse and needed a bit of treatment. If I’d done it the old way and blown immediately this would have been avoided.

So what would you advise? When it’s clear a player is offside and about to get involved or become active, is it better to whistle and avoid potential clashes like this, or play it strictly by the book?
 
The Ref Stop
Maybe this should be in the New Refs forum but it arose in a game today. I’m in my first season refereeing, and so far so good, I’m enjoying it. Youth level, U-12s to U-16s.

I have a question about offsides. In only the second game I reffed back in August, I was told off by an 11-year old for blowing for offside because he told me his teammate hadn’t been active and hadn’t touched the ball. As the lad who was offside was chasing with the centre-half hot on his heels with nobody else close I thought the whistle was justified.

However, since then I have tended to delay blowing the whistle until the player in an offside position has touched the ball or made a challenge on a defender. In some cases that has meant ignoring a chorus of “Offside Ref!” shouts from the sideline until the player has definitely become ’active’.

Then I had an incident today where a player in an offside position was chasing a through ball and delayed the whistle, but the defending team’s goalie was really quick off his line and the two crashed into each other. The keeper came off worse and needed a bit of treatment. If I’d done it the old way and blown immediately this would have been avoided.

So what would you advise? When it’s clear a player is offside and about to get involved or become active, is it better to whistle and avoid potential clashes like this, or play it strictly by the book?
If only one member of the attacking team can go for the ball, and they are in an offside position, experienced referees will whistle immediately to avoid the goalkeeper/attacker contact.
Similar situation arises when a winger chases the ball along the touchline, with no other attackers able to get anywhere near. Choices are to whistle immediately or to annoy the winger by letting them run 30 metres then whistle.
Well done - you explained the background and scenario well.
Enjoy your refereeing😁
 
Take a look at the diagrams in the back of the magic book. If memory serves, it is diagram 4 that shows that the R can penalize OS for interference with play before the attacker to touches the ball where the player is chasing and no onside attacker can get involved.

I’d be especially ready to make this call where there is a potential collision with the keeper.
 
As others have said. This is something you will learn with experience. If it's obvious blow it straight away. If there is potential for somebody else to be involved delay. Its not an easy skill to master. Get your self some lines. That will help you learn delaying techniques.

You won't always get it right. Even after 20 years on the circuit, I still get them wrong. But you just have to go with your gut.
 
I have a question about offsides. In only the second game I reffed back in August, I was told off by an 11-year old for blowing for offside because he told me his teammate hadn’t been active and hadn’t touched the ball.
I’d also suggest ensuring that said 11 year old signs up for a New Referee course at the first allowable opportunity ….. 🤔😀
 
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