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Coaches,   Welcome to the CHISSL Spring Soccer league.  My name is Jay Grabowski and I am your assignor for the referees who will be working your games.  I have just a few things to advise you on.

High School Rules are used for the CHISSL league.  All of your referees will be high school certified.  There are only a few differences between USSF Rules and High School Rules, mostly which center around substitutions.
 
Please have all of your substitutions at the halfway line when you as the coach want to bring these players into the game.  Either team can sub on a throw in and a corner kick as long as the team taking the throw in or corner kick is subbing into the game.  Players are not allowed to sub into the game on a throw in or corner kick from the bench.
 
Either team my sub on a goal kick, as long as the players are at the halfway line.  Players may sub from the bench after a goal is scored.  On an injury, only the team with the injured player may sub from the bench, one for one.   If an injury occurs, and players from one or both teams are at the halfway line waiting to sub into the game, all of these players may enter the game.  An injured player must leave the field of play if he or she is attended to on the field by a coach.  That player may re-enter the game at the next legal substitution.
 
I have advised the referees to answer any questions you may have regarding handling, ( not hand balls ) offside, or a properly executed slide tackle, or any other concerns you may have.  The best time to approach a referee regarding a call is usually at halftime, or after the game.  It is difficult for referees to properly answer questions when the game is being played. 

If you have any concerns with any of my referees, please address with Bob Astarita (410-877-5730) or Ed Kiley (443-528-8000). They will then get in touch with me.  Parents and teams should be on opposite sides of the field when possible. 

Lastly, please stress good sportsmanship to your players at all times.
  Thank you and have a fun season!
 
Jay Grabowski
Director Of Referees

Goal Kick
Caution
Foul
If you laughed you're in trouble
If you laughed really hard, you're in lots of trouble
 

Here are some of the basic rules the referee will be enforcing during the course of the game.

1. No Hands, please

I bet you knew that one. Most people who know nothing about soccer still know that you aren’t supposed to use your hands unless you’re the goalie.

A couple of points to clarify.

First, the rule for a hand ball includes using any part of the body from the tips of the fingers to the shoulder.

Second, the proper way to look at this soccer rule is that a player cannot “handle” the ball. A ball that is kicked and hits a player’s hand or arm is not a hand ball. This means that the referee must use his or her own judgment to some extent in determining whether or not a hand ball is accidental contact or a purposeful attempt to gain an advantage.

Believe it or not, there is also a situation in which the goalie cannot use his/her hands. This is sometimes called the back-pass rule. Goalkeepers cannot pick up a pass that came directly from one of their teammates. In this case, the goalkeeper must use his feet. Infraction of this soccer rule will result in an indirect kick from the point of the infraction.

2. Throw-ins

A throw-in is taken when the ball crosses a sideline and leaves the field. The two basic soccer rules for a proper throw-in are to have both feet on the ground and to throw the ball with both hands over the head.

For teaching purposes it is common to allow players under the age of 8 to take more than 1 attempt.

3. Corner Kicks & Goal Kicks

A corner kick or goal kick is taken when the ball leaves the field across the endline – you know, the end of the field.

If the offensive team kicks it out, play is restarted with a goal kick. If the defensive team kicks it out, play is restarted with a corner kick.

The goal kick is taken from anywhere inside the “goalie box” as it is affectionately called. It can be taken by any player, not just the goalkeeper.

The corner kick is taken from – yes, you guessed it – the corner nearest to where the ball left the field.

You may be confused at times in youth soccer games to see a goal kick retaken. This is because the FIFA soccer rules state that the ball is not back “in play” until it leaves the penalty area, the large box outside of the “goalie box”. No one can touch the ball until it leaves the penalty area, and if the ball is not kicked properly to leave the area, the kick must be retaken.

4. Fouls

The common rule of thumb on fouls is “If it looks like a foul, it probably is.”

Too true. A player cannot kick, trip, jump at, charge, strike, push, hold, or spit at an opponent.

So what’s the problem?

Soccer can be a physical, contact sport when two opposing players both want the soccer ball and no parent likes it when little Johnny loses the ball and ends up on the ground!

“Foul!” cries the parent. “Little Johnny was pushed!”

What you need to know as a parent is that bumping or going shoulder-to-shoulder while competing for a ball is not a foul until the hands or elbows come up. This is a bit of a judgment call and not all referees will call it the same way. Some soccer rules are actually not black-and-white.

Remember though, the referee is ALWAYS right.

5. Direct and Indirect Free Kicks

The simple difference between the two is this: On a direct kick you can score by kicking the ball directly into the goal. On an indirect kick you cannot score. An indirect kick must be touched by another player before it can go into the goal – that is the kicker and a second person.

As a parent on the sideline, you can tell whether the kick is direct or indirect by looking at the referee. For an indirect kick, the referee will hold one arm straight up in the air until the second person touches the ball. No arm up, it’s a direct kick.

There are many soccer rules around what causes a direct or indirect kick.

In general, a direct kick comes from a contact foul or hand ball. Everything else is indirect.

6. Penalty Kick

A penalty kick results from a contact foul or hand ball by the defending team within the penalty area – the large box on either end of the field. So it’s a type of direct kick also.

The ball is placed on the penalty spot, 12 yards in front of the center of the goal.

All players must remain outside the penalty area and the penalty arc until the ball is kicked. The goalkeeper must have both feet on the goal line until the ball is kicked.

If after the ball is kicked, it rebounds off of the goal or the keeper and stays on the field, the ball is “live” and anyone can play it.

7. Two-touch Rule

A player cannot touch the ball twice in a row when putting the ball in play. You will see this called many times in youth soccer. It applies everywhere. You will see it frequently on kick-offs or direct and indirect kicks. If a kid barely hits the ball and decides to take another swipe at it, that is a two-touch.

This also applies to throw-ins. A kid cannot throw the ball in and then kick it. Nope. No way. No can do.

8. Yellow and Red Cards

This is the way punishment is given in soccer. The FIFA soccer rules give the guidelines for when to give a yellow card to a player and when to give a red card. I’m not going to get into the specifics here.

If a player is given two yellow cards in the same game, that is equal to a red card. A red card can be given at any time without the player first receiving a yellow card. When a player gets a red card, they must leave the game and their team must play short. An ejected player cannot be replaced.

9. Offside

I decided to leave the best for last.

This is without a doubt the least understood rule by parents and coaches alike.

Check your local league soccer rules first. There’s a good chance that this rule won’t be called for the U8 or younger teams. You may be off the hook for now. However, if you are a U8 or U6 coach you still need to know this rule so you can begin teaching your players not to be offside.

The first thing to know is that you cannot be offside on a corner kick, goal kick, or throw-in. Don’t ask me why. Just accept it and go on. The explanation is too long.

Also, it is not an offense for a player to be in an offside position. The player must be involved in active play as determined by the referee to be called offside.

As quoted from the FIFA soccer rules:

A player is in an offside position if: he is nearer to his opponents’ goal line than both the ball and the second last opponent.

Clear yet? I didn’t think so.

Try this. An offensive or attacking player can’t be ahead of the ball and involved in the play unless there is a defender between him and the goalkeeper. Or, you can’t hang out at the other team’s goal waiting for the ball.

A few other buts. You can’t be offside if you are standing on your half of the field. Also, the offside rule applies when the ball is kicked, not when the player receives the ball.

To be honest with you, this can be a hard rule to understand. Don’t get too hung up on it. Trust the referees. Download the FIFA Laws of the Game . They have good diagrams of what is and isn’t considered offside.



Famous soccer referees

You think American football referees have it tough? How about European Soccer referees? These guys practically put their life on the line during every game. In American Football, even if a ref makes a "bad call" and the people in the stands don't agree, no one worries about losing their life. When the game's over it's over. Not so with soccer. Soccer referees have a truly thankless job. There are six soccer referees during the game. Each of them has his duties and the zone of the control. This big quantity of the referees is explained by difficult rules. So, the soccer is in the Guinness World Records. There are some famous soccer referees, for example, Ken Aston and Urs Meier. Ken Aston is famous for his red and yellow cards.

Soccer referees are very important in the soccer game. Their work is not to violate the game rules. There are some famous soccer referees like Ken Aston and Urs Meier. Nowadays nobody can imagine the modern football without yellow and red cards. They were created by Ken Aston thirty five years ago.

Ken Aston was born on the ninth of January in 1915 in Colchester. He worked forty four years in the education field, including his experience as a school teacher. In the war years he served in the British Army.  He became a soccer referee in 1936. He was a referee of the World matches. After the finish of the referee carrier (1963) since 1966 till 1970 he had been a chairman of the referee commission of FIFA.


And in this field he showed himself as a creative man. He confirmed a modern design of the soccer referees clothes. So, referees are called "men in black". He developed the conception of the fourth arbiter. He changed the flag of the side referee in order to make it more noticeable. He was the first who organized the first seminars for arbiters in order to approve the rules. At last he created cards.

The brightest fragments of his life Aston told in his biography: "Do you know that I was the only referee in the world who worked during the match with a helmet". In 1940 during the war he worked during the game at the factory. He had to stop the game because of bombing.

After the last final of the England's Cup he got a golden medal from the Queen's hands. He loved Cup's matched most of all. "In August many teams from towns begin to choose each other according to the "play-off" system. In November professional clubs join them. It is a bright sight when a team from a town plays with "Manchester United". And there are forty five thousand people in this match. Sometimes such games lead to a sensation result and a team from a town is called "giant killer".

But there is the most important question "How did Aston create cards" During the World Championship in 1966 there was a difficult situation for referees. It was a game England-Argentina. The referee was German Craitlayt who didn't understand anything except for his language. So, some misunderstandings appeared. Next morning brothers Charltons got to know that they had got warning. They called the organizers and one confirmed that it was truth.

"I knew about this case. On that day on my way home I was going through the crossroads, but I didn't manage - the yellow light began to light, then the red one. It happened three times. When I was on the third crossroads the idea came to my head - there is a way to avoid language problems! It was the idea about cards." In a week it became popular over the world.

Ken Aston died in October in 2001.

Thus, any soccer game is impossible without soccer referees. Some of them are very famous, for example, Ken Aston. He was a creative man and he invented some things which are used nowadays and the soccer can't take place. He invented red and yellow cards. He did it occasionally. He invented yellow and red cards only in 1970, but many people think that they have always existed in the soccer. He changed the design of the referee clothes. Nowadays his design is used for referee clothes. So, it is impossible to imagine a full picture of the soccer without Kan Aston.ferees have a truly thankless job. There are six soccer referees during the game. Each of them has his duties and the zone of the control. This big quantity of the referees is explained by difficult rules. So, the soccer is in the Guinness World Records. There are some famous soccer referees, for example, Ken Aston and Urs Meier. Ken Aston is famous for his red and yellow cards.


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