
Former
Premier League referee Dermot Gallagher thinks the altered offside rule will
be easier to understand in practice.
In recent seasons, players have been allowed to occupy offside positions
without necessarily being penalised depending on whether they were thought
to be actively involved in play or not.
Now they will be punished if they clearly attempt to play a ball close to
them when their actions have an impact on an opponent’s ability to play the
ball.
At first glance, the reworking of the rule appears confusing but Gallagher,
a Premier League referee for 15 years until he retired in 2007, thinks it
makes the game more straightforward.
He told
Sky Sports News HQ: "A player has got to make an obvious
action and clearly impact on their opponent’s ability to clear the ball.
"I actually think it will simplify it. When you see the season unfold on
Saturday, you’ll think that it’s one thing on paper and another in practice.
"Don’t forget the managers and coaches have had referees visiting them
throughout pre-season to go through clips and it won’t be a shock to them.
"When this was issued in the summer, referees took this into their games so
hopefully they will be as up to speed as the players."
Gallagher talked through a number of scenarios from last season to highlight
how the rule might change which decisions are reached, including these three
goals...
GOAL: Juan Mata (Manchester United) v Stoke City, 02/12/14
THE SCENARIO: United have a free kick on the right which Mata takes and it
swings in towards goal. At the point the ball is played, Marcos Rojo is in
an offside position and he attempts to head the cross in but misses. Nobody
else connects with the ball and Mata’s effort goes straight in, with a goal
awarded.
THIS SEASON’S DECISION: Goal is disallowed.
GALLAGHER SAYS:
Rojo has jumped for the ball and clearly gone to head
it. He is clearly offside when the free kick is taken and the keeper can’t
make his move until Rojo has either headed the ball or missed it. He is
deemed to have had an impact on the goalkeeper, so that goal would be
disallowed. Even though he doesn’t touch it, he has a chance to touch it. If
that ball went 20 feet over his head, he wouldn’t be deemed offside because
he would have no chance of playing it.
GOAL: Harry Kane (Tottenham) v Burnley, 20/12/14
THE SCENARIO: A free kick is awarded to Tottenham on the left flank which
Kane plays quickly down the wing. The ball rolls towards Christian Eriksen,
who is in an offside position, so he steps out of the way and does not get
involved in the passage of play. The ball is eventually crossed into the box
by another player and finds Kane in an onside position. He heads in and the
goal stands.
THIS SEASON’S DECISION: Goal is given.
GALLAGHER SAYS:
This goal was given last year and would be given again
this year too, the reason being that being in an offside position as Eriksen
was is not an offence in itself. He makes no move towards the ball and
doesn’t affect an opponent. He has got to make an attempt to play the ball,
move towards the ball or affect an opponent to be offside and he didn’t do
any of those three things. He stood his ground and under the guidance, that
would be a goal this year.
GOAL: Kevin Mirallas (Everton) v Manchester United, 26/04/15
THE SCENARIO: Ross Barkley lifts the ball over the United defence looking
for Romelu Lukaku, who is in an offside position, but the ball runs past him
to Mirallas instead and he runs onto it from an onside position. Lukaku
stops briefly then runs alongside him looking for a pass as the two Everton
players close in on David de Gea with no defenders in between. Mirallas
chooses to shoot himself rather than pass and scores, with the goal awarded.
THIS SEASON’S DECISION: Goal is given.
GALLAGHER SAYS:
Lukaku is in an offside position but stops and doesn’t
affect the defender because the defender is on the wrong side of him. The
ball goes through to Mirallas and he is allowed to continue. That was a goal
last season and if it occurs again this season it will be a goal again.
Lukaku has no impact on an opponent or the ball because it has gone straight
over his head.
Of course, it won’t just be when the ball hits the net that potentially
contentious offside calls will be made.
There are several other scenarios where decisions made last season will
change now, with Gallagher also explaining how these three incidents would
pan out in the future...
MATCH: QPR v Crystal Palace, 28/12/14
THE SCENARIO: James McArthur passes to Yannick Bolasie, who is in an offside
but stays inactive and allows the ball to run past him. Mauricio Isla gets
back to take possession for QPR and Bolasie closes him down, forcing the
defender to play back to goalkeeper Rob Green.
GALLAGHER SAYS:
Bolasie is now clearly offside. Last season you would
have played on but Isla is then pressured by a player who was initially in
an offside position into giving the ball back to green and QPR then lose the
ball. The player pressured the defender because he started in an offside
position. Isla’s options are closed down and he can’t play up the line and
Bolasie has impacted on his ability to clear the ball as successfully as he
wants to.
MATCH: Manchester United v Sunderland, 28/02/15
THE SCENARIO: A ball is lifted down the left wing to Connor Wickham in an
offside position but United’s Antonio Valencia gets there first. Wickham
then quickly closes down Valencia, who steps back inside and past his
opponent to get out of a difficult situation in the corner of the pitch and
surges upfield.
GALLAGHER SAYS:
The Wickham situation is similar to Bolasie’s. He starts
in an offside position and when Valencia gets to the ball, Wickham closes
him down very quickly. As it is, the defender does pretty well to get out of
that but Wickham would be offside now.
MATCH: QPR v Everton, 22/03/15
THE SCENARIO: A ball is played over the halfway line with Charlie Austin
several yards offside in a central position. He keeps jogging as he allows
James McCarthy to get back and move the ball out to the left wing. Austin
tracks him and as the ball runs towards the touchline he closes McCarthy
down but the Everton player is able to play up the line before he can get
there.
GALLAGHER SAYS:
Austin didn’t have offside given against him last season
but he would now. This situation is a great example of how it’s different
because as the defender comes away, Austin comes almost 40 yards across the
pitch with him to eventually try to close him down again. You will see the
flag going up in those situations more often because the assistant referees
will be tuned in to it.