Refdad,
I have a question about:
"On the specific questions:
1. Once in an offside position, there is NOTHING the player can do to place herself onside until either: a) an opponent makes a controlled play of the ball or b) a teammate again touches the ball and the player is no longer in an offside position."
Let's say a forward ends up in an offside position while his teamate A has the ball (either from being there when teamate receives the ball or makes a run too early). Teamate A continues to dribble the ball. Forward gets back to an onside position. Teamate A dribbles the ball a bit more then plays the ball to the forward.
The part I am confused about is the "b) a teamate again touches the ball". Does this mean that teamate A must pass the ball first to another teamate before a pass to the forward would work.
In an extreme example, what if teamate A dribbles the ball around for half an hour then passes to the forward. Should the forward still be ruled offside?
Offside position is reevaluated on EVERY TOUCH of the ball by a teammate. The AR must take a "snapshot" of the players position every time the teammate touches the ball to determine if any player is in an
offside position. If at the moment teammate A touches the ball, the forward is no longer in an offside position, the forward is free to receive the ball without being penalized. It's simple: when a teammate last touched the ball, was the player in offside position? If yes, they can't play; if no, then play away.
Some additional illustrations:
#10 WHT touches the ball and #3 WHT is in offside position when
that touch occurs. WHT #3 is now
prohibited from interfering with play. It doesn't matter how long play continues or what happens in the intervening time, WHT #3 can't play, UNTIL:
- An opponent makes a controlled play.
- The ball goes out of play.
- A teammate again touches the ball and WHT #3 is not
at that moment in an offside position.
When that WHT teammate touches the ball, the AR again takes a snapshot and evaluates if WHT #3 is in an offside position. The cycle of evaluating offside position continues with EVERY touch of the ball by a WHT teammate.
Another:
WHT #10 dribbles ball. First touch, WHT #3 is in an offside position (can't participate in play). At the second touch by WHT #10, WHT #3 still in an offside position (maybe waiting for his teammate to catch up?). At the third touch by WHT#10, WHT #3 is now level with the ball. WHT #3 is now NOT in an offside position and is now free to interfere with play, interfere with an opponent or gain an advantage from his position.
...lots of words and we haven't even begun to touch on how to determine if a player is in an offside position (which in itself is NOT an infringement). Sheesh, I'm giving myself a headache. I think it's easier to just leave the decision to the referees, it's what they get paid the big bucks for...