In an otherwise incredibly dull game on the line yesterday, I had one slightly awkward moment with an offside call in the second half.
Ball is pumped forward from the blue defence with the offside line just in the reds own half - blue attacker is marginally offside, but it's clear the ball is running through to the red GK despite the attacker chasing, so I don't flag. For whatever reason, rather than playing the ball with ages of space, the GK tries to shepherd the ball out. And on a boggy pitch, that gives the attacker time to catch up and pressure him, although he does just about manage to get it out.
Defending team try to restart with a FK just inside their own half (obviously not, would be way back with GK at best!) but both me and the ref are saying goal kick which they don't like. My question is if I should have considered the attacker to become active when he starts to pressure the GK, or if the fact that the GK easily had time to play the ball could be seen as resetting the offside phase?
Ball is pumped forward from the blue defence with the offside line just in the reds own half - blue attacker is marginally offside, but it's clear the ball is running through to the red GK despite the attacker chasing, so I don't flag. For whatever reason, rather than playing the ball with ages of space, the GK tries to shepherd the ball out. And on a boggy pitch, that gives the attacker time to catch up and pressure him, although he does just about manage to get it out.
Defending team try to restart with a FK just inside their own half (obviously not, would be way back with GK at best!) but both me and the ref are saying goal kick which they don't like. My question is if I should have considered the attacker to become active when he starts to pressure the GK, or if the fact that the GK easily had time to play the ball could be seen as resetting the offside phase?