Gary Neville & Jamie Carragher Train to be Linesmen! | The Referees Part 2



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Gary Neville and Jamie Carragher go head to head in the official assistant referee offside test! Will they flag offside goals accurately?

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20 thoughts on “Gary Neville & Jamie Carragher Train to be Linesmen! | The Referees Part 2”

  1. Lol I had to play my through passes slower just so that my forwards were not caught offside xD sometimes with some refs in some games.

    And any refs challenges I make are straight yellows . Because I'm slim and challenges anyone makes on me two fractures even no cards lol 😂 none

  2. Seems baffling how a line ref can simultaneously keep in view the ball being released and the players at the front line, especially when it's kicked half the pitch away. Guess they must have to rely on the sound of the kick sometimes but with a noisy crowd not sure how that's possible. No wonder there were so many offside controversies before VAR.

  3. Good take away. For a cross-over, if it looks "just" offside, you can bet that the player was ONside.

    They would need to be about a meter "off" in a cross over to be considered offside.

  4. This is a very fake situation. Put them on a real game at about step 6 level where the quality is OK and the play is fast with all the noise, crowd 'helping', benches moaning. Offside is only one (the main) assistant role but within a fraction of a second the offside dynamic can change as yes, players and the ball move and become involved. Also modern strikers, even junior levels, play the onside/offside game. Often they will move on/offside and one deliberately stays offside but does not become active while a player runs in from behind. Right wingers often stand just offside but not active, just to block assistants vision so they can't see across to an attacker who is offside/active. This is all legitimate tactics for attackers to confuse defenders/assistants into guessing who is/isn't offside but requires 100% concentration and Nano second refresh of the 'picture'in front of you.

  5. What people forget is that the ball kicker and the potentially offside player are often not in the assistants field of vision together. Angles can help but you have to be looking across the line so need to use sound to indicate when the ball was kicked. Lining is much harder than PROPER assistant role.

  6. He's holding the flag in the wrong hand and waved it on an offside instead of raising it, waiting for ref eye contact then indicating which third of the cross pitch the offside player was in.

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