Offside rules include many articles and notes; some quite complicated.
Iran's goal ruled offside could be among those examples where the Iranian player moves out of the offside position before getting the ball and scoring a goal.
It could depend on the referees whether to give priority to the initial offside position of the player or that he moved out before scoring from an onside position:
Since offside is judged at the time the ball is touched or played by a teammate, not when the player receives the ball, it is possible for a player to receive the ball significantly past the second-to-last opponent, or even the last opponent, without committing an offence. This used to be expressed in the Law by International Board Decision 1 to Law 11 using the following phrase, "A player who is not in an off-side position when one of his colleagues passes the ball to him or takes a free-kick, does not therefore become off-side if he goes forward during the flight of the ball." https://ssbra.solidwebworks.com/ifab...df/1997min.pdf
Determining whether a player is "involved in active play" can be complex. The quote, "If he's not interfering with play, what's he doing on the pitch?"
In an effort to avoid such criticisms, which were based on the fact that phrases such as "interfering with play", "interfering with an opponent" and "gaining an advantage" were not clearly defined, FIFA issued new guidelines for interpreting the offside law in 2003 and these were incorporated into Law 11 in July 2005. The new wording sought to define the three cases more precisely, but a number of football associations and confederations continued to request more information about what movements a player in an offside position could make without interfering with an opponent. In response to these requests IFAB circular 3 was issued in 2015 to provide additional guidance on the criteria for interfering with an opponent. This additional guidance is now included in the main body of the law and forms the last 3 conditions under the heading "Interfering with an opponent" as shown above. The circular also contained additional guidance on the meaning of a save, in the context of a ball that has "been deliberately saved by any opponent." http://static-3eb8.kxcdn.com/documen...11_v2.0_EN.pdf
Iran's goal ruled offside could be among those examples where the Iranian player moves out of the offside position before getting the ball and scoring a goal.
It could depend on the referees whether to give priority to the initial offside position of the player or that he moved out before scoring from an onside position:
Since offside is judged at the time the ball is touched or played by a teammate, not when the player receives the ball, it is possible for a player to receive the ball significantly past the second-to-last opponent, or even the last opponent, without committing an offence. This used to be expressed in the Law by International Board Decision 1 to Law 11 using the following phrase, "A player who is not in an off-side position when one of his colleagues passes the ball to him or takes a free-kick, does not therefore become off-side if he goes forward during the flight of the ball." https://ssbra.solidwebworks.com/ifab...df/1997min.pdf
Determining whether a player is "involved in active play" can be complex. The quote, "If he's not interfering with play, what's he doing on the pitch?"
In an effort to avoid such criticisms, which were based on the fact that phrases such as "interfering with play", "interfering with an opponent" and "gaining an advantage" were not clearly defined, FIFA issued new guidelines for interpreting the offside law in 2003 and these were incorporated into Law 11 in July 2005. The new wording sought to define the three cases more precisely, but a number of football associations and confederations continued to request more information about what movements a player in an offside position could make without interfering with an opponent. In response to these requests IFAB circular 3 was issued in 2015 to provide additional guidance on the criteria for interfering with an opponent. This additional guidance is now included in the main body of the law and forms the last 3 conditions under the heading "Interfering with an opponent" as shown above. The circular also contained additional guidance on the meaning of a save, in the context of a ball that has "been deliberately saved by any opponent." http://static-3eb8.kxcdn.com/documen...11_v2.0_EN.pdf
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