No, I don't think so. A block is not a deflection. A block however can be a save but the ball needs to be heading towards goal or close to the goal.I guess it would be different if he tried to kick the ball as opposed to the above block.
But all the descriptions make it sound like a deliberate block of a pass... What is going on here?
Yes. Even if it was a deliberate kick, it wouldn't have been a deliberate kick to the goalkeeper.Had the forward not been in that position should the goalkeeper have been allowed to pick up the ball following the defender's intervention?
Since when have expectations of doing better being a factor? How can the general laws reflect ability or inability? That’s a minefield of refereeing uncertainty!
A manager expects a player to score from 12 yards. The reality and the expectation are usually different!
If it touches the attacking player in any way its offside providing an offence has been committed as per law 11.On the one hand, reading Law 11 smoothly liquidizes the brain into blancmange. However, if one can live with the absence of properly defined terms and meandering drivel, the content somewhat agrees with common sense. Replace the word play with pass and the first offside is an offence because the only pass was from a teammate and the offender gained a ridiculous advantage from being in an offside position despite the opponent's block. The second incident is less clear because it's hard to see who plays/passes the ball, but on the assumption that the defender plays the ball backwards and it deflects off the attacker, the receiving player is not penalized because the ball was not passed to him by a teammate
Fwiw I think it should be offside here. Its an instinctive movement as opposed to a deliberately thought out play of the ball.. he has just reacted.it would help if the law were simplified to ensure the only interpretation was offside. Currently I feel it can be interpreted either way.