You cannot be offside in a throw in unless the space time continum becomes corrupt and the throw in never existed. Or if the ball you are playing with is actually a chicken.
During a free kick , offside rule is valid .So if the attacker is in an offside position , the offside will be called .But if there is a throw I'm , then the offside rule is not valid which means one can receive the ball in an offside position in case of a throw in.
No. This is not a cautionable offense. There are other things that can happen simultaneously to the offside call that could be. But being offside would never be a listed reason for a caution.
It is not. It is exempt from the offside rule.
If the player receives it from a kick by a team-mate and a defender merely deflects it, then he is guilty of an offside infraction. If it was controlled and passed by an opponent, then he is not.
You are not guilty of an offside infraction if you receive the ball directly from a throw-in by a team-mate, the defender deflection would still count as "the throw-in" unless they controlled the ball first. Even if they did control the ball, you are not guilty of an offside infraction if an opposing player passed it.
You can not be guilty of an offside offense when directly receiving a throw-in, goal kick, or corner kick. This does not include any plays stemming from these restarts. Once the ball is controlled by anyone, normal offside rules apply once again.
Directly from a goal kick, corner kick, or throw-in.
The linesmen have a flag each. They use these to indicate, a foul, a throw in, a corner, an offside, a goal kick or a substitution.
They help the referee with offside decisions and signal a number of things, such as throw-ins and substitutions.
A goal keeper punt may score a goal. There are no restrictions on this in the FIFA Laws of the Game.
Its called Offside, or being in an offside position. Being in an offside position, in and of itself, is not a foul. The foul occurs when the ball is PLAYED to the PERSON in an offside position. You can be "passive", not involved in the play, in an offside position and there is no foul.
Yes, you can be called offside on direct free kicks and indirect free kicks. You cannot be offside on a throw-in, goal kick, corner kick, or kickoff, though.