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Essay / Rules, regulations and situations involved in...
Football is a team sport played between two opposing teams of eleven players. Football's national governing body is the FA, which governs English football, while FIFA is the governing body for international football. These governing bodies are responsible for setting high standards for the game, regulating the game and making regulations, ensuring the health and safety of all involved, and handling complaints against the game. The rules and unwritten football etiquettes are rules you don't follow. it is necessary to act, but it is just good to follow them to demonstrate good manners. An example would be when a player is judged offside and he continues to shoot but does not score, he must pretend that he knew he was offside all along and did not score. really tried to score at all. The aim of the game is to score a goal. , which is done by kicking or directing the ball towards the opponent's goal line. At kick-off, all players must be in their own half and the ball must move forward at kick-off. You are allowed to score directly from kick-off. The game always restarts with a central kick-off after a goal is scored or in the second half. If the ball goes beyond the sidelines, it is returned to the team that did not last touch the ball. The game is played for 90 minutes, divided into two halves of 45 minutes each. There is a 15-minute half-time break for the players. Injuries may be added by the referee at the end of each half to compensate for time lost due to substitutions, cautions and injuries. Extra time consisting of two 15-minute halves is added when the score is tied in cup competitions. If the scores are still tied after the two 15-minute halves, penalties are played to determine the winner. The length of a throw must be between 100 yards and 130 ya...... middle of paper ......rows must be taken within 5 seconds of the restart. Players can only stay in the key for 3 seconds and must exit after 3 seconds. Coaches may call timeouts. Each team can call 2 timeouts in the first half and 3 in the second half, each timeout only lasts one minute. Many situations can occur in basketball and referees must follow the rules and regulations issued by EB to ensure the game is played in a fair and safe manner. If a team gains possession of the ball and keeps it for more than 24 seconds, they are in violation of the 24-second rule. The referee will therefore blow the whistle and stop the game, then restart the game giving possession to the opposing team. If a player comes into contact with another, the offending player will be penalized and the game will be stopped. Play would resume and the non-offending player would be awarded a free throw..