@@diegodessy9700 Forward To complete the rule. 2 people need to be between you and the goal line when a pass is purposefully played forward to you(meaning you're in front of the person giving the pass). Meaning IN GENERAL the goalie + one more. So 1, meaning only the goalie, would make you offside.
@@prouvencau6343 Lol. No. You can be offside from a ball that travels backwards. The direction the ball moves has nothing to do with offside and never has done. This is a myth believed by far too many football "fans"
@Londronable The ball doesn't need to travel forward for you to be offside. Never has done. You can pass a ball sideways/backwards and it will still be offside if the player who retrieves it was in an offside position when the sideways/backwards ball was played.
This video is specifically only German league games. I don't know why the original video doesn't make that clear for some reason. As for offside, that is determined at the point that the ball leaves the passer's foot. So you can see that Haaland is well behind the defender at that point and just sprints past him. Sometimes the goalkeeper goes up the other end to try and score if there is a situation where you are desperate for a goal and have nothing to lose. Like, if you're losing 2-1 and a loss will knock your team out of the cup, then it doesn't really matter whether you lose 2-1, 3-1 or 10-1 - so you might as well throw everything you've got at them to try and make it 2-2.
Since you mentioned "must be fun for a goalkeeper to score a goal", I'm obligated to recommend you to check out the goalie that scored the most goals in the world, Rogério Ceni. A masterclass in freekicking, as well as an incredible part of the defensive side of São Paulo (the only team he ever played for) during his peak. He has more than 100 goals in his career.
4:32 they were anticipating a direct free kick, but the other team moved the ball to the side before taking the shot 7:22 the receiver's positioning in the moment of the pass is what matters 9:10 the whole ball has to be over the line
@@anamatias6215 You may have made the same mistake as me when reading Mickey's comment, thinking he was referring to the first clip? In the time-stamped example, the ball is a good 8 or 9 yards outside the area. Your explanation is correct, just the wrong clip 😁
Your multiple faces of disbelief are the verses of a spontaneous ode to the most absolute surprise. Et, voila! That's the magic of football: 90 endless minutes to witness only 3 seconds of impossible magic without boring and endless television commercials.
Minute 9:25 - Yes, the ball have to full pass the line, no matter if it touch or not the ground. In professional matches balls have got a mircochip that signal the refree on his smart watch if the ball full crossed the line, thus there is no error chance
Once you fully understand these extreme emotions especially the twists or last second winning goal you will understand what really makes us love this game 🥰
Mate you should do more football reactions, it's clear you get it, you will grow to love it, and see why the whole world does,try watching "Barcelona the glory days" it's mind blowing and will show you football at it's very best, there is something very satisfying about watching Americans enjoying football,good reaction.
The first is an indirect free kick, given for a lesser category of offences. Only a direct free kick awarded in the box is a penalty kick, so to score the other guy has to touch it first. The full circumference of the ball has to have crossed the line, also in the air above the line. That means it has to be a few inches more forward than people intuitively feel as a goal being scored, and has only been properly applied since goal line technology and still only for the goal line and not the other lines. Imagine a carpenter's square put at the rear edge of the line upright, only if the ball does not touch or intersect anywhere with the upright of the carpenter's square it's a goal.
To explain a couple of rules you looked puzzled about: 1) It's offside if the player who receives the ball is beyond the last defender in the moment his teammate kicks the ball 2) The ball has to completely cross the line to be goal
Minte 8:13 - It happens when you're losing and the game will end such early that you can think this is "the last chance". In this situations sometimes the goal keeper go into the opponent side to have one more little chance to score and tie the game... it doesn't matter if opponent take the ball and score because you're going to lose tha game anyway
10:58 In football there are multiple divisions and in the first division of Germany (Bundesliga) the bottom 2 get "relegated" to the 2nd division,while the 2nd to last plays a play-off against the 3rd of the 2nd division (2.Bundesliga) and in this scenario,they were probably tied for 16th or there was max a 2 point difference between 15th and 16th before this match,and you get 3 points for a win,which means the winner of that game "survives" in the Bundesliga and will play again in that division and the loser will play in the division below that(2.Bundesliga)
Also important is the fact that this goal happened in minute 90 +1, making it basically impossible for the other team to even hope to get an equalizer in the remaining time to keep their hopes alive.
In footall (soccer) goalkeepers, being the ones that have the "privilege" of touching the balls with their hands, they wear a different uniform to differenciate them from the other players and the referee (who usually wears a black uniform)...
You mentioned that scoring a goal as a goalkeeper must be a fun moment so i was thinking that you could react to Rogero Ceni, the goalkeeper that scored over 100 goals in his career and are totally a legend of the game because of that.
The first one is an indirect freekick inside the opposing penalty area. You cant shoot from an indirect freekick so his teammate had to tap the ball to him. The reason the entire opposing team were on the goalline was because as its a freekick a defensive wall is allowed but as its less than 10 yarda from the goal the wall cant be further back.
the goalkeeper goes to the opponent's area only in absolutely exceptional cases (example: his team is losing 1-0, there are a few seconds left in the match and his team has a corner kick in their favour. at that point it makes sense to go to throw himself into the opponent's area to help his teammates, it is the last chance to score and therefore avoid defeat). it is still very very very difficult to score from that distance, even when the goalkeeper is not in his area
1:03 you're always allowed to tap the ball to a team-mate. In this case it was because it was an indirect free kick, which the taker isn't allowed to score from, so he had to play the ball to a team-mate before a goal could be scored.
When you are losing by one goal and have the last chance to equalize, then even the goalkeepers get used to helping in the attack. And that's why the goalkeeper was not in the net
Around 9:10 when the ball doesn't cross the line, you can see the ref indicate it's not a goal and then he points to his wrist. The major leagues in Europe have an automated system (developed from the HawkEye system used to check line calls in tennis) to check if the ball has crossed the line - the decision is sent to the ref on a wrist-worn device within a second of the event happening.
Yes the rule is all of the ball must cross all of the line for a goal or the ball to go out of play for a goal kick, a corner or a throw in. Players are judged to be offside or not based on where they are when the ball is passed forward, not on where they happen to be when they receive it.
The offside rule is that the attacker has to be behind the last defender when the ball gets passed so haaland was behind him when the ball got passed so he was onside. The context for the relegation match was whoever lost goes down to the league below and the winner stays in the higher league
Goalkeepers are like the rest of the players with the "privilege" they can touch the ball with their hands inside their own penalty area if the ball doesn't come from a pass of a teammate, so goalkeepers can even score a goal for their team and usually can go to the opponent's goal to give more chances to score a goal for their team when it needs it in a corner kick o in a foul for their team...
The offside rule is pretty easy, a player is offside if when the pass start between him and the goal there is less than two defenders, the pass is forward and the attacker is in the opposite half. Just think that the line of scrimmage is in the position of the second last defender (on the halfway line if the second-last defender is in the attacker's half of the pitch), the snap is when the pass start, whoever is across the line at moment of the snap is offside. The foul occurs simultaneously with the snap. Just like in the American Football.
4:30 you often put the wall of defenders to one side, and have the goalkeeper guard the exposed side. You can’t necessarily block the _entire_ goal, but you can make it smaller, so to speak, by forcing the kicker’s hand. And besides, if the wall was right in front, the goalkeeper can’t see the kick and react, should the ball make it past the wall. Hence why you’ll see that it’s the goalkeeper who directs where the wall should be placed; it’s his or her set-piece to manage. You’ll often see the defenders lock arms all facing the kicker, except for one player on the end of the wall who’ll be facing the goalkeeper, and “walk” the wall this way or that under their direction, before finally turning to face the kicker too.
If I remember the rules correctly and I'm not mistaken, the offside situation involves the position of the passer, the defenders and the possible receiver of the pass. In the case of Haaland's apparent counterattack goal, he is further forward than the defenders when the ball passes close to the defender on the left side of the defence, but here Haaland's position counts at the moment his teammate makes the pass, that is, when the ball "leaves his foot", so if I remember the play correctly, he is in the correct position.
the moment the pass leaves the foot of the person who sent the pass, the player shouldnt be behind the defender. During the pass he can run in behind. Thats why he isnt offside at 7:33
There are different types of offenses in football. While the majority of those warrant a direct free kick (meaning you can shoot the ball at the goal and it counts if it goes in), some lesser offenses are penalized with an indirect free kick, meaning if the ball goes straight into the goal without touching anyone else, no goal is given. That's why the other player tapped the ball first, so that it's "live" and can be shot towards the goal.
00:59 In a indirect free-kick the player has to pass the ball, not kick it directly to the net and the barrier has to be at 9,15m from the ball if possible (in this case the limit for the barrier is the goal line), 1:22 Discusting, 2:50 3s to the end a cancer survivor (Haller) scored the wining goal, 3:28 1st touch on the ball 11s after sub, 3:38 They were losing 2-4 and the Glass-Man (Robben) score the wining goal with 40s to the end, 4:30 That's Goalkeepers decision, trying to cover part of the net, 5:02 In front of the net it's usually not a fake-out and from his body language it has not, 6:51They were down 3-1 and the debut Terminator (Haaland) scored a hat-trick to win the match, 7:53 It's the last play of the match and the goalkeeper went up to try to tie the game, that's why he left his position, 9:08 YOU ARE RIGHT, 9:25 That's a yellow card, 10:41 One of the teams has to win to stay at the Bundesliga and it's 3min to the end of the game, 12:55 Again the goalkeeper went up at the end trying to get at least a tie for the team.
7:35 a receiving player needs to be behind the offside line (last defender beffore the keeper) when the passing player kicks the ball, as soon as the ball was kicked (within the traveling time) the offside line dissapears and the receaving player can move forward as much as he wants
Relegation: you get kicked out of the league to a lower tier. Which at higher levels can mean a loss of millions of dollars in revenue for the next season. And teams from the lower league get promoted to replace the teams that were kicked out. It is usually the last 2 from the higher tier and top two from the lower tier that are trading places. Goalkeeper, goaltender, goalie and keeper are all correct. If there is a last minute scoring opportunity when a team is desperate for a goal, the goalie would help out with the offence. At the risk of conceding a goal if the opposition gets the ball. Some of these moments were not necessarily about the technical difficulty of the goal, but the crucial timing. Such as important goals scored in the last minutes or seconds.
The first is an indirect free kick, the kicker cannot shot directly in the goal. To be honest the indirect free kicks are pretty common, for example they are awarded in the event of offside. That is a very rare case of an indirect free kick inside of the penalty area.
The whole ball has to cross the line, or “there has to be daylight between the ball and the line”. And for offside, it depends on your position when the ball was kicked,. If you’re quick you can run start in front of the defenders and wait for the ball to be released forward then outpace them to it.
offside happens at the moment of the pass. if the teammate is ahead (any part of his body) of the last guy of the opposite team when the pass is initiated then it's offside. Whatever happens after depends of their own foresight and athletic skills
The "offside" rule is determined from when the passing player passes the ball to the receiving player. (I also had this problem as a youngster) You have to look at where the receiving player is when the ball is kicked. So, the passing player can kick the ball forward to what would otherwise be an "offside" position, as long as the receiving player is "onside" at the moment of contact............follow? (I keep on reading this explanation to see if it's clear, and I'm not sure it is.....just google it Ryan)
0:50 It's a free kick. I understand that the goalkeeper took the ball in his hands after a pass from his player, so a free kick was awarded from the place where it happened. According to the rules, you cannot immediately hit the goal. If the ball does not touch the second player and flies into the goal, the goal will not be scored, so the player touched the ball with his foot and the other kicked.
offsides is the moment the player passes the ball. basically the moment the ball and the foot stop making contact is when offsides is calculated. and the other player who is going to receive the ball must be behind the second to last PLAYER (not just defensive player but any player.. but 90% of the time it will be a defensive player). arms arent calculated for offsies so they can be past the second to last player closest to the goal line. and offsides only applicable on enemys sides.. you cant be offsides in your own half.
Two of the best goals EVER Scored happened way back in the 70's 1) *Frank Worthington wonder goal 1978-79 (Bolton W v Ipswich Town).* The Linesmen, The Ref; The Players; The crowd; The Commentators and Everyone watching on TV ! *"NOBODY SEEN IT COMING"* (and if you've never seen it before ? You won't see it coming either). It was arguably the most Skilful goal 'EVER'. 2) *The greatest FA Cup goal EVER! Ronnie Radford Rocket...* In 1972 The pitch was a Total Mud bath yet he managed to hit the ball like it was fired out of a Cannon from 40 yards. The goal even caused a Pitch Invasion. I'd advise Anyone to watch both those goals.
From an aerial view of the circumference of the ball is completely crossed the line then it is a goal. Even if a little bit of the ball is behind the line it’s not a goal.
The goalkeeper is close to the opponent's area because he is seconds away from ending the game (he is probably losing the game) and he is another player who can score a goal or disrupt the other team's defense because there is a "foreign body" there. . Minute 8:22.
For a goal, the whole of the ball has to cross the whole of the line, so even if the ball is 99% across the line, that 1% makes it not a goal. It's the same when the ball crosses the sideline or the byeline (Line at either end of the pitch where the goals are). This is often controversial as a ball can look 'in' but still not have a goal awarded - it's one of the things that goal line technology and Video Assistant Referees (VAR) are supposed to fix by giving more certainty. It still doesn't stop the sense of aggrievement by the players or fans who think that their team has scored. For offside, the player needs to be behind the line of the (second as the goalkeeper also counts) last defender at the time that the pass played by a teammate is struck. This is the bit most non-football fans don't get as the attacker can be behind the defence at the moment they take possession of the ball as it is his starting position that determines whether he is onside or offside.
Btw its only a compilation featuring Bundesliga (German league) moments from the last decade. There is a lot of incredible play through the rest of Europe too. And you should look at a Giroud compilation one day. Not the best player but he has some incredible goals. He has won a Puskas award (awarding the best goal of the year in the world).
very nice reaction and happy you keep learning about the beautiful game.... But i have a question here.... Why the heck do you have a blender under your desk ?? this need answering !! lol
If You wanna see technical ball magic watch Ronaldinho, brazilian Ronaldo (or almost anyone from the brazilian national team between 1994-2008), Messi. If You want hardworking athletes watch C. Ronaldo (portoguese), Rooney. If You want long passes wacth Xabi Alonso, Pirlo. If You want tackles watch Gattuso, Chiellini. If You want freekicks watch Juninho, Roberto Carlos. if You want long range goals watch Frank Lampard, Ricardo Quaresma. If You want all of the above watch Steven gerrard and Zinedine Zidane! And there is ofc Zlatan Ibrahimovic who is many of the above but certainly Zlatan.... Of course there are many others these are just some of my favorites.
As far as I remember, it is not offside when at the moment of the pass you are covered by TWO players while you are attacking. But the way it goes, the one of them is almost always the Goalkeeper. So it seems like you have to be covered by only one player of the opposite team. You younger fellows correct me if I'm wrong.
basically yes, with some additional caveats: you need to be on the opponent half and it needs to be a forward pass for there to be an offside, e.g. it's not possible to be offside directly from a corner kick.
CLIP 1. When taking an INDIRECT free kick you cannot hit the ball straight at the goal. You have to pass it to someone else first. Goalkeeper, keeper or goalie. NEVER goal tender !! PITCH not FIELD. 4.40. You have to be 10 yards away from the ball when defending a free kick. 9.12. The WHOLE of the ball must cross the WHOLE of the line to be a goal. The ball has a sensor inside it that reacts if it crosses the line, and it signals to the refs smart watch .
Minute 7:30 - Offside is measured when the pass START not when it lands. Thus if you were in a regular position when your team mate hit the ball to pass you, you can run pass all opponents to catch the ball and you're not offside
The first clip is a result of goalkeeper getting the ball into his hands after it was passed by his teammate (they can't do that, if teammate passes to goalie, he can only use foot like other players) When this happens, referee gives indirect free kick to the other team, so they can't score from this, the ball has to be played, that's why the player gave the ball "a little tap" - so the other guy could score also, 10:58 "there is context I'm not getting'', meanwhile couple seconds before : "loser gets relegated" - are you pretending or what?
You can´t analyze offside checking when he RECEIVES the ball, but IMMEDIATELLY when the ball leaves the foot of who is passing the ball. The video play starts when the ball is already halfway to Haaland. Everything indicates he was behind the last defender in the moment of the pass.
Violation of the rules in the small penalty area must be performed indirectly, that is, there must be at least one pass. And 11 people on the line is really an almost impossible barrier to score! Regarding the wall distance for free kicks, there is a certain distance from the ball that must be respected! In football, no referee uses tape measures, and for this reason you will see them measuring with steps... The ambush in football is a moment when the pass to the player is made! Whether the player was behind the defense or not! If it was an ambush/breach, for the moment you are wondering, there is no ambush! There is a practice of artificial ambush, mainly applied in the so-called direct hits. Plows the boost to the kicker's ball, all the defenders start running to the other field with the aim of leaving the attackers at the moment of the shot behind them ;) For a goal to be scored, the ball with its entire orbit must have crossed the goal line! Just kidding, but not kidding, I measured my punch strength/speed when I was about 25 years old. The speed that was recorded at the impact was over 140 km/h... But I don't become a football player for many other reasons :D I think I mentioned some interesting points about how they are interpreted! But I'm curious how you will interpret the fact that there is no American football world cup... What do you think is the reason!?
Watching football matches regularly can help you better understand or better said feeling the seemingly of these impossible moments 😉Try the premier league
It's easier to call the european game "football" since there is only one person from each team who can play the ball with the hands, and this only in a determined area of the field. The american version is also called "footbal" but only two people out of 53 are actually kicking the ball. QED
4:00 "He don't need a team .." 😄 lmao. That is exactly what they said about/accused Arjen Robben often. He would just dribble and not pass the ball off... "he's playing on his own ..." . lol The whole world, including opponents, knew what he would do, cut inside to the left and give a shot with his left foot, and jet he managed to do it so often .. 8:10 in overtime when a team is behind they bring the 'goal keeper' up front for a corner (see 13:29 😉). Desperate last minute attempt to score an equalizer... So when the opponents retrieve the ball , the goal will be empty .. (Compare with taking of the 'Goal tender' in ice hockey in the last half minute ..)
The "Was he offside"? No, the impossible moment was that Erling Haaland scored a hat-trick within just 20 mintues in his debut for Borussia Dortmund. I am not a Haaland, but it was "almost announced" that he would, and noone can challenge his quality.
Minute 11:16 - At the end of the season the last 3 teams of the league will be relegated to 2nd division and the best 3 teams of the 2nd division will be promoted in 1st division. In this match two teams were so close in league points that the winner will sta in 1st division, the loser will go 2nd division
"Scoring a goal from 80 meters away....."
My guy slowly turning into a European,- without even noticing.....
I didn't even realize that 😅
7:40 offside is decided from the moment the ball leaves the passers foot, not when the player receives it. He was behind the defender at that time
I love how you call football football. You're the first American who doesn't insist on calling it soccer. Thank you for that!. ❤
Offside depends on where you are when the ball is kicked
By the team mate Who Is passing the ball...
@@diegodessy9700 Forward
To complete the rule. 2 people need to be between you and the goal line when a pass is purposefully played forward to you(meaning you're in front of the person giving the pass). Meaning IN GENERAL the goalie + one more.
So 1, meaning only the goalie, would make you offside.
Another rule :
Every ball played backward is onside
@@prouvencau6343 Lol. No. You can be offside from a ball that travels backwards. The direction the ball moves has nothing to do with offside and never has done. This is a myth believed by far too many football "fans"
@Londronable The ball doesn't need to travel forward for you to be offside. Never has done. You can pass a ball sideways/backwards and it will still be offside if the player who retrieves it was in an offside position when the sideways/backwards ball was played.
This video is specifically only German league games. I don't know why the original video doesn't make that clear for some reason. As for offside, that is determined at the point that the ball leaves the passer's foot. So you can see that Haaland is well behind the defender at that point and just sprints past him.
Sometimes the goalkeeper goes up the other end to try and score if there is a situation where you are desperate for a goal and have nothing to lose. Like, if you're losing 2-1 and a loss will knock your team out of the cup, then it doesn't really matter whether you lose 2-1, 3-1 or 10-1 - so you might as well throw everything you've got at them to try and make it 2-2.
They are all German teams, so not too misleading!
Since you mentioned "must be fun for a goalkeeper to score a goal", I'm obligated to recommend you to check out the goalie that scored the most goals in the world, Rogério Ceni. A masterclass in freekicking, as well as an incredible part of the defensive side of São Paulo (the only team he ever played for) during his peak. He has more than 100 goals in his career.
131 career goals. He scored 21 or 22 goals in 2005, outscored peak Ronaldinho that year! And hes currently the manager for, ofc, São Paulo.
4:32 they were anticipating a direct free kick, but the other team moved the ball to the side before taking the shot
7:22 the receiver's positioning in the moment of the pass is what matters
9:10 the whole ball has to be over the line
Inside the area, free kicks are always indirect (there must be a touch of the ball before the shot for goal). A direct free kick is always a penalty.
@@anamatias6215 That free kick was from outside the area though, so Mickey's explanation is valid.
@@anamatias6215 You may have made the same mistake as me when reading Mickey's comment, thinking he was referring to the first clip? In the time-stamped example, the ball is a good 8 or 9 yards outside the area. Your explanation is correct, just the wrong clip 😁
@@AlienFishGames Yes you're right. I was thinking about the first clip.
9:10 Slight correction: The whole of the ball has to be over the whole of the line.
The entire world calls it football. Call it football Ryan!
Your multiple faces of disbelief are the verses of a spontaneous ode to the most absolute surprise. Et, voila! That's the magic of football: 90 endless minutes to witness only 3 seconds of impossible magic without boring and endless television commercials.
Minute 9:25 - Yes, the ball have to full pass the line, no matter if it touch or not the ground. In professional matches balls have got a mircochip that signal the refree on his smart watch if the ball full crossed the line, thus there is no error chance
The goalie scored the goal to keep the team in the league . A one in a million times
Once you fully understand these extreme emotions especially the twists or last second winning goal you will understand what really makes us love this game 🥰
If you don’t understand the concept of relegation… I suggest you watch “football explained for Americans”
Think i saw that in The Early Learning Centre once lol
Yes you can call the 'goal keeper': 'goalie'/'keeper' etc.
Here you goooooo! Ryan is becoming a football fan! 😁
Mate you should do more football reactions, it's clear you get it, you will grow to love it, and see why the whole world does,try watching "Barcelona the glory days" it's mind blowing and will show you football at it's very best, there is something very satisfying about watching Americans enjoying football,good reaction.
The first is an indirect free kick, given for a lesser category of offences. Only a direct free kick awarded in the box is a penalty kick, so to score the other guy has to touch it first.
The full circumference of the ball has to have crossed the line, also in the air above the line. That means it has to be a few inches more forward than people intuitively feel as a goal being scored, and has only been properly applied since goal line technology and still only for the goal line and not the other lines. Imagine a carpenter's square put at the rear edge of the line upright, only if the ball does not touch or intersect anywhere with the upright of the carpenter's square it's a goal.
To explain a couple of rules you looked puzzled about:
1) It's offside if the player who receives the ball is beyond the last defender in the moment his teammate kicks the ball
2) The ball has to completely cross the line to be goal
Nope, it's offside if the player who receives the ball is beyond the second-last defender (the last usually is the goalkeeper but non always).
Minte 8:13 - It happens when you're losing and the game will end such early that you can think this is "the last chance". In this situations sometimes the goal keeper go into the opponent side to have one more little chance to score and tie the game... it doesn't matter if opponent take the ball and score because you're going to lose tha game anyway
You are from the US Ryan just call it soccer , we all know what you mean by that , love watching your videos , greets from the Netherlands.
10:58
In football there are multiple divisions and in the first division of Germany (Bundesliga) the bottom 2 get "relegated" to the 2nd division,while the 2nd to last plays a play-off against the 3rd of the 2nd division (2.Bundesliga) and in this scenario,they were probably tied for 16th or there was max a 2 point difference between 15th and 16th before this match,and you get 3 points for a win,which means the winner of that game "survives" in the Bundesliga and will play again in that division and the loser will play in the division below that(2.Bundesliga)
Also important is the fact that this goal happened in minute 90 +1, making it basically impossible for the other team to even hope to get an equalizer in the remaining time to keep their hopes alive.
That also
I was expecting a goal from the other team
For somebody who has his feet in a turned on blender and only to say "it hurts", that man deserves my admiration and respect.
In footall (soccer) goalkeepers, being the ones that have the "privilege" of touching the balls with their hands, they wear a different uniform to differenciate them from the other players and the referee (who usually wears a black uniform)...
You mentioned that scoring a goal as a goalkeeper must be a fun moment so i was thinking that you could react to Rogero Ceni, the goalkeeper that scored over 100 goals in his career and are totally a legend of the game because of that.
The first one is an indirect freekick inside the opposing penalty area. You cant shoot from an indirect freekick so his teammate had to tap the ball to him. The reason the entire opposing team were on the goalline was because as its a freekick a defensive wall is allowed but as its less than 10 yarda from the goal the wall cant be further back.
the goalkeeper goes to the opponent's area only in absolutely exceptional cases (example: his team is losing 1-0, there are a few seconds left in the match and his team has a corner kick in their favour. at that point it makes sense to go to throw himself into the opponent's area to help his teammates, it is the last chance to score and therefore avoid defeat). it is still very very very difficult to score from that distance, even when the goalkeeper is not in his area
1:03 you're always allowed to tap the ball to a team-mate. In this case it was because it was an indirect free kick, which the taker isn't allowed to score from, so he had to play the ball to a team-mate before a goal could be scored.
When you are losing by one goal and have the last chance to equalize, then even the goalkeepers get used to helping in the attack. And that's why the goalkeeper was not in the net
The blender gag was hilarious!
Around 9:10 when the ball doesn't cross the line, you can see the ref indicate it's not a goal and then he points to his wrist. The major leagues in Europe have an automated system (developed from the HawkEye system used to check line calls in tennis) to check if the ball has crossed the line - the decision is sent to the ref on a wrist-worn device within a second of the event happening.
Yes the rule is all of the ball must cross all of the line for a goal or the ball to go out of play for a goal kick, a corner or a throw in. Players are judged to be offside or not based on where they are when the ball is passed forward, not on where they happen to be when they receive it.
The offside rule is that the attacker has to be behind the last defender when the ball gets passed so haaland was behind him when the ball got passed so he was onside. The context for the relegation match was whoever lost goes down to the league below and the winner stays in the higher league
Goalkeepers are like the rest of the players with the "privilege" they can touch the ball with their hands inside their own penalty area if the ball doesn't come from a pass of a teammate, so goalkeepers can even score a goal for their team and usually can go to the opponent's goal to give more chances to score a goal for their team when it needs it in a corner kick o in a foul for their team...
I don't remember many goalkeepers scoring, but I point out that a header is a strong weapon after a corner. And Goalkeepers are usually tall...
@@Theodoros.K.MouchtarisAnd in those situations they are usually unmarked..
You need to watch Rogerio Ceni, the goalkeeper with the most goals ever
Players: "lemme score goal plz"
Ryan: "no" *pause*
Those fields are incredibly hard to maintain. The surface e is real grass, not turf.
I love a good ball manipulation too !
The offside rule is pretty easy, a player is offside if when the pass start between him and the goal there is less than two defenders, the pass is forward and the attacker is in the opposite half.
Just think that the line of scrimmage is in the position of the second last defender (on the halfway line if the second-last defender is in the attacker's half of the pitch), the snap is when the pass start, whoever is across the line at moment of the snap is offside. The foul occurs simultaneously with the snap. Just like in the American Football.
4:30 you often put the wall of defenders to one side, and have the goalkeeper guard the exposed side. You can’t necessarily block the _entire_ goal, but you can make it smaller, so to speak, by forcing the kicker’s hand. And besides, if the wall was right in front, the goalkeeper can’t see the kick and react, should the ball make it past the wall. Hence why you’ll see that it’s the goalkeeper who directs where the wall should be placed; it’s his or her set-piece to manage. You’ll often see the defenders lock arms all facing the kicker, except for one player on the end of the wall who’ll be facing the goalkeeper, and “walk” the wall this way or that under their direction, before finally turning to face the kicker too.
Hiya Ryan, I think all these clips were just from the German league.
If I remember the rules correctly and I'm not mistaken, the offside situation involves the position of the passer, the defenders and the possible receiver of the pass. In the case of Haaland's apparent counterattack goal, he is further forward than the defenders when the ball passes close to the defender on the left side of the defence, but here Haaland's position counts at the moment his teammate makes the pass, that is, when the ball "leaves his foot", so if I remember the play correctly, he is in the correct position.
the moment the pass leaves the foot of the person who sent the pass, the player shouldnt be behind the defender. During the pass he can run in behind. Thats why he isnt offside at 7:33
There are different types of offenses in football. While the majority of those warrant a direct free kick (meaning you can shoot the ball at the goal and it counts if it goes in), some lesser offenses are penalized with an indirect free kick, meaning if the ball goes straight into the goal without touching anyone else, no goal is given. That's why the other player tapped the ball first, so that it's "live" and can be shot towards the goal.
00:59 In a indirect free-kick the player has to pass the ball, not kick it directly to the net and the barrier has to be at 9,15m from the ball if possible (in this case the limit for the barrier is the goal line), 1:22 Discusting, 2:50 3s to the end a cancer survivor (Haller) scored the wining goal, 3:28 1st touch on the ball 11s after sub, 3:38 They were losing 2-4 and the Glass-Man (Robben) score the wining goal with 40s to the end, 4:30 That's Goalkeepers decision, trying to cover part of the net, 5:02 In front of the net it's usually not a fake-out and from his body language it has not, 6:51They were down 3-1 and the debut Terminator (Haaland) scored a hat-trick to win the match, 7:53 It's the last play of the match and the goalkeeper went up to try to tie the game, that's why he left his position, 9:08 YOU ARE RIGHT, 9:25 That's a yellow card, 10:41 One of the teams has to win to stay at the Bundesliga and it's 3min to the end of the game, 12:55 Again the goalkeeper went up at the end trying to get at least a tie for the team.
7:35 a receiving player needs to be behind the offside line (last defender beffore the keeper) when the passing player kicks the ball, as soon as the ball was kicked (within the traveling time) the offside line dissapears and the receaving player can move forward as much as he wants
and only in the opponent's half.
Relegation: you get kicked out of the league to a lower tier. Which at higher levels can mean a loss of millions of dollars in revenue for the next season.
And teams from the lower league get promoted to replace the teams that were kicked out. It is usually the last 2 from the higher tier and top two from the lower tier that are trading places.
Goalkeeper, goaltender, goalie and keeper are all correct. If there is a last minute scoring opportunity when a team is desperate for a goal, the goalie would help out with the offence. At the risk of conceding a goal if the opposition gets the ball.
Some of these moments were not necessarily about the technical difficulty of the goal, but the crucial timing. Such as important goals scored in the last minutes or seconds.
The first is an indirect free kick, the kicker cannot shot directly in the goal. To be honest the indirect free kicks are pretty common, for example they are awarded in the event of offside.
That is a very rare case of an indirect free kick inside of the penalty area.
The whole ball has to cross the line, or “there has to be daylight between the ball and the line”. And for offside, it depends on your position when the ball was kicked,. If you’re quick you can run start in front of the defenders and wait for the ball to be released forward then outpace them to it.
Haaland, 7:40, wasnt off side because when his team mate pass the ball, the striker was still behind the last defender
Offside is considered when the ball leaves the foot of the passer.
Its a goal when the entire ball is over the line when viewed from directly above.
Offside only counts when the ball is kicked. At minute 7:40 when the ball is kicked the striker (the one who scored the goal) is in play.
offside happens at the moment of the pass. if the teammate is ahead (any part of his body) of the last guy of the opposite team when the pass is initiated then it's offside. Whatever happens after depends of their own foresight and athletic skills
The "offside" rule is determined from when the passing player passes the ball to the receiving player. (I also had this problem as a youngster) You have to look at where the receiving player is when the ball is kicked. So, the passing player can kick the ball forward to what would otherwise be an "offside" position, as long as the receiving player is "onside" at the moment of contact............follow?
(I keep on reading this explanation to see if it's clear, and I'm not sure it is.....just google it Ryan)
Offside line is set from the moment the pass starts.
0:50 It's a free kick. I understand that the goalkeeper took the ball in his hands after a pass from his player, so a free kick was awarded from the place where it happened. According to the rules, you cannot immediately hit the goal. If the ball does not touch the second player and flies into the goal, the goal will not be scored, so the player touched the ball with his foot and the other kicked.
offsides is the moment the player passes the ball. basically the moment the ball and the foot stop making contact is when offsides is calculated. and the other player who is going to receive the ball must be behind the second to last PLAYER (not just defensive player but any player.. but 90% of the time it will be a defensive player). arms arent calculated for offsies so they can be past the second to last player closest to the goal line. and offsides only applicable on enemys sides.. you cant be offsides in your own half.
Two of the best goals EVER Scored happened way back in the 70's 1) *Frank Worthington wonder goal 1978-79 (Bolton W v Ipswich Town).* The Linesmen, The Ref; The Players; The crowd; The Commentators and Everyone watching on TV ! *"NOBODY SEEN IT COMING"* (and if you've never seen it before ? You won't see it coming either). It was arguably the most Skilful goal 'EVER'. 2) *The greatest FA Cup goal EVER! Ronnie Radford Rocket...* In 1972 The pitch was a Total Mud bath yet he managed to hit the ball like it was fired out of a Cannon from 40 yards. The goal even caused a Pitch Invasion. I'd advise Anyone to watch both those goals.
From an aerial view of the circumference of the ball is completely crossed the line then it is a goal. Even if a little bit of the ball is behind the line it’s not a goal.
Ciai Ryan, grazie per le divertenti reaction che ci proponi. Finalmente riesco a vedere un tuo vixeo in "quasi diretta". Ciao da Milano
The goalkeeper is close to the opponent's area because he is seconds away from ending the game (he is probably losing the game) and he is another player who can score a goal or disrupt the other team's defense because there is a "foreign body" there. . Minute 8:22.
You should watch Welcome to Wrexham. You can learn along with your fellow Americans who bought the team!
Not a football fan at all but that was awesome !!! yes Goalie is cool to say
The goalies only go out that far if its like final minute and they are losing to have an extra player in the box for their final chance
Call it what you like, we all understand either way 😊
For a goal, the whole of the ball has to cross the whole of the line, so even if the ball is 99% across the line, that 1% makes it not a goal. It's the same when the ball crosses the sideline or the byeline (Line at either end of the pitch where the goals are). This is often controversial as a ball can look 'in' but still not have a goal awarded - it's one of the things that goal line technology and Video Assistant Referees (VAR) are supposed to fix by giving more certainty. It still doesn't stop the sense of aggrievement by the players or fans who think that their team has scored.
For offside, the player needs to be behind the line of the (second as the goalkeeper also counts) last defender at the time that the pass played by a teammate is struck. This is the bit most non-football fans don't get as the attacker can be behind the defence at the moment they take possession of the ball as it is his starting position that determines whether he is onside or offside.
Impossible moments that just so happen to have been recorded. Super impossible moments!
Btw its only a compilation featuring Bundesliga (German league) moments from the last decade. There is a lot of incredible play through the rest of Europe too.
And you should look at a Giroud compilation one day. Not the best player but he has some incredible goals. He has won a Puskas award (awarding the best goal of the year in the world).
And Giroud turned out to be a winner for his team as emergency goalkeeper as well!
very nice reaction and happy you keep learning about the beautiful game.... But i have a question here.... Why the heck do you have a blender under your desk ?? this need answering !! lol
If You wanna see technical ball magic watch Ronaldinho, brazilian Ronaldo (or almost anyone from the brazilian national team between 1994-2008), Messi.
If You want hardworking athletes watch C. Ronaldo (portoguese), Rooney.
If You want long passes wacth Xabi Alonso, Pirlo.
If You want tackles watch Gattuso, Chiellini.
If You want freekicks watch Juninho, Roberto Carlos.
if You want long range goals watch Frank Lampard, Ricardo Quaresma.
If You want all of the above watch Steven gerrard and Zinedine Zidane!
And there is ofc Zlatan Ibrahimovic who is many of the above but certainly Zlatan....
Of course there are many others these are just some of my favorites.
As far as I remember, it is not offside when at the moment of the pass you are covered by TWO players while you are attacking. But the way it goes, the one of them is almost always the Goalkeeper. So it seems like you have to be covered by only one player of the opposite team.
You younger fellows correct me if I'm wrong.
basically yes, with some additional caveats: you need to be on the opponent half and it needs to be a forward pass for there to be an offside, e.g. it's not possible to be offside directly from a corner kick.
CLIP 1. When taking an INDIRECT free kick you cannot hit the ball straight at the goal. You have to pass it to someone else first.
Goalkeeper, keeper or goalie. NEVER goal tender !!
PITCH not FIELD.
4.40. You have to be 10 yards away from the ball when defending a free kick.
9.12. The WHOLE of the ball must cross the WHOLE of the line to be a goal. The ball has a sensor inside it that reacts if it crosses the line, and it signals to the refs smart watch .
Minute 7:30 - Offside is measured when the pass START not when it lands. Thus if you were in a regular position when your team mate hit the ball to pass you, you can run pass all opponents to catch the ball and you're not offside
This is the worst explanation of offside i’ve ever seen
@@n0body550 Maybe English is your primary language and you can do it better. I'm sorry
Offside counts when the ball leaves the passer
Goal keeper or Goalie or keeper is fine 😊
You should do a reaction to Hurling. Irish field sport that's possibly the fastest, toughest & most skillful sport on grass.
The first clip is a result of goalkeeper getting the ball into his hands after it was passed by his teammate (they can't do that, if teammate passes to goalie, he can only use foot like other players)
When this happens, referee gives indirect free kick to the other team, so they can't score from this, the ball has to be played, that's why the player gave the ball "a little tap" - so the other guy could score
also, 10:58 "there is context I'm not getting'', meanwhile couple seconds before : "loser gets relegated" - are you pretending or what?
more then half the ball was in, it was a goal, this was before VAR
You can´t analyze offside checking when he RECEIVES the ball, but IMMEDIATELLY when the ball leaves the foot of who is passing the ball. The video play starts when the ball is already halfway to Haaland. Everything indicates he was behind the last defender in the moment of the pass.
0:50 is an indirect freekick.basicly you can't shoot at the goal directly,someone else needs to touch the ball first
There is Football, then there is Rugby and then there’s that American Eggball/handball/armpitball mix thingy
offside is judged at the moment the ball is kicked forward.
You can see why the rest of the world mainly finds American Football boring. So much skill in soccer
Violation of the rules in the small penalty area must be performed indirectly, that is, there must be at least one pass. And 11 people on the line is really an almost impossible barrier to score!
Regarding the wall distance for free kicks, there is a certain distance from the ball that must be respected! In football, no referee uses tape measures, and for this reason you will see them measuring with steps...
The ambush in football is a moment when the pass to the player is made! Whether the player was behind the defense or not! If it was an ambush/breach, for the moment you are wondering, there is no ambush!
There is a practice of artificial ambush, mainly applied in the so-called direct hits. Plows the boost to the kicker's ball, all the defenders start running to the other field with the aim of leaving the attackers at the moment of the shot behind them ;)
For a goal to be scored, the ball with its entire orbit must have crossed the goal line!
Just kidding, but not kidding, I measured my punch strength/speed when I was about 25 years old. The speed that was recorded at the impact was over 140 km/h... But I don't become a football player for many other reasons :D
I think I mentioned some interesting points about how they are interpreted!
But I'm curious how you will interpret the fact that there is no American football world cup... What do you think is the reason!?
Watching football matches regularly can help you better understand or better said feeling the seemingly of these impossible moments 😉Try the premier league
Goalies have to bee away from their own goal line when their team is attacking, for tactical reasons.
Het Spoorpark in Tilburg heeft ook zo’n ‘natuurlijk water’systeem.
thats all scenes from the german Bundesliga
The ball has to pass the line completely to make it a goal
foot soccer bal is a great sport :)
in some plays in the las minute every player goes to attack that's why there's no goalkeeper
It's easier to call the european game "football" since there is only one person from each team who can play the ball with the hands, and this only in a determined area of the field.
The american version is also called "footbal" but only two people out of 53 are actually kicking the ball. QED
Plus, the rest of the world outside the US calls it football in all our various languages ofc.
4:00 "He don't need a team .." 😄 lmao. That is exactly what they said about/accused Arjen Robben often. He would just dribble and not pass the ball off... "he's playing on his own ..." . lol
The whole world, including opponents, knew what he would do, cut inside to the left and give a shot with his left foot, and jet he managed to do it so often ..
8:10 in overtime when a team is behind they bring the 'goal keeper' up front for a corner (see 13:29 😉). Desperate last minute attempt to score an equalizer... So when the opponents retrieve the ball , the goal will be empty .. (Compare with taking of the 'Goal tender' in ice hockey in the last half minute ..)
Reads 'loser gets relegated'
'I must be missing some context' ?????
The "Was he offside"?
No, the impossible moment was that Erling Haaland scored a hat-trick within just 20 mintues in his debut for Borussia Dortmund.
I am not a Haaland, but it was "almost announced" that he would, and noone can challenge his quality.
Its called goalkeeper we usually say just keeper
Now that I finished the video...... 😅
sometimes the ball travels at almost 200km per hour. try to put your hands there to stop it :D
The offside decision is made at the time the ball is played forward...
You can tell it's Bundesliga - there's beer in the stadium!
You can call them goal keeper, goalie, or even the slightly archaic goalminder (perhaps not), but definitely not goal tender.
Minute 11:16 - At the end of the season the last 3 teams of the league will be relegated to 2nd division and the best 3 teams of the 2nd division will be promoted in 1st division. In this match two teams were so close in league points that the winner will sta in 1st division, the loser will go 2nd division