The following posts have been tagged with "soccer detailed"...
Soccer Offside Trap
When defenders (often a “flat defense”) intentionally move forward to try to “trap” an attacker who doesn’t have the soccer ball in an offside position. Don’t try to teach this to youth soccer teams; it is too complex. However, you can teach your soccer team to stay 12-18 steps away from your goal when the other soccer team has a Free Kick, which is a similar concept and will keep the attackers from scoring on headers or rebounds off the Free Kick. (Defenders must stay 10 yards from the soccer ball on free kicks, so this will only work if the kick is from 20-30 yards out). Remember, the Offside Rule is in effect on Free Kicks. (See “Flat Defense” and “Offside Rule, Detailed“).
Soccer Offside Rule (Simplified)
If “offside” is called in your age bracket, you can teach this simple version: You are not offside if you are doing any of the following:
- Are in your own half of the soccer field (your half is the half your goalkeeper is on). Or,
The penalty for Offside is that an Indirect Free Kick is awarded to the opposing soccer team to be taken from the place where the offside occurred.
When my forwards “push up” without the soccer ball, I tell them to stay 2 steps behind the Last Defender (not counting the goalkeeper) so they are less likely to be caught offside or to be accidentally called offside. (See “Played” & “Offside Rule, Detailed“).