Offside Advanced Law 12

Backpass Law and Goalkeeper Restrictions – Referee Academy Lesson 11

Backpass Law and Goalkeeper Restrictions matters because goalkeepers have special protections and special restrictions under the Laws of the Game. The referee must judge both possession and the fairness of the goalkeeper’s actions.

TVV Key Rule:
Goalkeeper decisions are rarely about one isolated touch; they depend on control of the ball, opponent pressure, and whether the action breaches the specific protections or limits in the Laws.

How referees judge it

Referees first define whether the goalkeeper has control. They then judge whether the goalkeeper may use the hands, is delaying the restart unfairly, or has committed an offence with or without pressure.

Why this situation causes debate

Many fans focus on only one frame or one replay angle. Referees are trained to judge the entire action, the law wording, and the real effect of the incident before deciding whether play should continue, be stopped, or be reviewed.

VAR angle

VAR involvement is limited here unless the incident becomes a goal, penalty, or direct red card matter. Most goalkeeper management decisions stay with the referee on the field.

Practical example

A typical example is a deliberate kick from a team-mate toward the goalkeeper. The referee must decide whether it was a true deliberate kick, a deflection, or a miskick under pressure.

What to watch on the replay

  • the exact starting moment of the incident
  • the player actions immediately before contact
  • the point of contact and body shape
  • the restart required by the law
  • whether the incident changed the outcome of the phase

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a goalkeeper always pick up the ball in the penalty area?
No. Restrictions apply in backpass and throw-in situations and when control has already been established.

Does every miskick count as a backpass?
No. The referee must judge whether the team-mate deliberately kicked the ball to the goalkeeper.

Is time-wasting by the goalkeeper automatic misconduct?
Not automatically. The law and the match context determine whether a sanction or restart is required.

Sources