Estimated read time: 7-8 minutes
This World Cup has prompted some questions we simply can't answer for you.
Can anyone stop Messi? Does Merlin the duck like wearing that jersey? What happens if the Congo's statue fan has to sneeze?
That said, if you're a first-time soccer watcher still confused by all this footie, we're here to help! Free kicks, hydration breaks, stoppage time ... there's a lot to know. We put out a call for your burning World Cup questions — and we'll keep answering them if you have more. We're compiling answers to your FAQs below.
Well, first off, it's "offside," per the AP Stylebook. Secondly, this is a common question — and one that can make you appear a soccer aficionado if you know the answer. Essentially, a player is offside if he or she is closer to the opponent's goal line than the ball and second-to-last opposition player (the goalkeeper is usually the last) the moment the ball is passed by a teammate. There are various caveats — for example, you cannot be offside inside your own half — but that is the gist. It can be confusing and a source of great debate.
Now to some new questions...
No, the team only plays short-handed for the rest of the current match.
A red card, which is handed out by an official when a player does something naughty like intentionally striking another player, using excessive force and endanger an opponent, spit or bite a portion of an ear off like Mike Tyson, means the player has been ejected and must leave the pitch. From that point on, the team would play a "man down," meaning it can only field 10 players instead of 11. In some cases, teams have had two red cards in a single game and had to play with nine.
The player must serve a one-game suspension for the following match. However, the team itself is not penalized, and can return to its full starting strength of 11 players.
Each of the 48 teams were allowed 26 players on their roster, so 1,248 players. Of those, more than half — 891 to be exact — are participating for the first time.
A lot people would like to know that.
FIFA came under scrutiny about a month before the tournament for their high-price tickets and sales tactics, leaving some fans upset. That caused demand for the tickets to drop, while other fans had to make tough financial sacrifices when it came to matches to attend.
They are free. Every single game of the World Cup is fully televised on FOX and FS1. Matches can also be streamed live on the FOX One app.
The 48 teams in this year's World Cup qualified through regional tournaments. (Host countries — in this case the U.S., Canada and Mexico receive automatic bids).
As for how the 12 groups are determined, the 48 teams are divided into four, 12-team "pots" based primarily on the FIFA World Rankings. The first pot includes the host nations and then the top nine highest-ranked teams. The next 36 highest-ranked teams, divided into sequential pots of 12. Teams are then drawn at random, meaning that every group contains exactly one team from each of the four pots.
A player don't necessarily have to be born or raised in the Ivory Coast to play for the team. But there are some restrictions to prevent countries from stacking their rosters. If a player has a biological parent or grandparent who was born on the territory of the country or if they have established residency in the country for at least five years, they would be allowed to play.
There are actually four officials for every World Cup match. although they may not be as prominent as an American football game.
The head referee controls the match and enforces the rules of the game, while two assistant referees manage offsides, throw-ins, and goal kicks. A fourth oversees substitutions, team benches, and indicates stoppage time.
In World Cup play it's FIFA that determines uniform combinations, not the teams. Soccer's governing body's primary objective is to ensure strong visual contrast on the pitch so players, referees, and television viewers can easily tell the teams apart. So basically, you will never see teams wearing two shades of blue in the same match.
And if you missed our first round of No Dumb Questions...
Unlike American football, basketball or hockey, the clock never stops in soccer. If there are delays for such things as injuries, blatant time-wasting or the aftermath of goals, those seconds or minutes are added on at the end of each half in a period called "stoppage time." There's an extra twist in this World Cup: hydration breaks. These three-minute stoppages in the middle of each half have been introduced to help players deal with the summer heat in the United States, Canada and Mexico (they're also a convenient spot for extra TV ads). Those three-minute blocks must also be added to the overall stoppage time, meaning there is typically at least five minutes of extra play in each half of this World Cup.
Well, both are dead-ball situations and given after fouls. The key difference is that a penalty kick is awarded after a foul inside the penalty area — the big rectangle drawn near the opposing goal — and a free kick is awarded outside the penalty area. A penalty is a free shot at goal — from the designated spot, which is central and 12 yards (11 meters) out — with just the goalkeeper able to stop the shot. A free kick can be defended against by a whole team and is taken from where the offense occurred.
Take note of this, as it's likely to be the case in a number of groups. Starting from this World Cup, head-to-head results between two or more teams tied on points will be the first tiebreaker — and not overall goal difference, which had been the case previously. The second tiebreaker is goal difference in the games between the teams concerned, followed by the highest number of goals scored in those games. Only then — as a fourth tiebreaker — does overall goal difference come into play.
It's another new measure being implemented at this World Cup with the intention of speeding up play and stopping time-wasting. If referees deem a player is taking too long on a throw-in, they can start a visual five-second countdown. If it reaches five seconds, the throw-in will be awarded to the opposing team. And it has already happened, with Bosnia-Herzegovina defender Sead Kolašinac giving up a throw-in for taking too long against Canada.
Yes, eagle-eyed reporters and fans have noted that logos on bottles of condiments — such as ketchup from Heinz — have been taped over inside stadiums. This is a directive of FIFA, the soccer governing body always very careful to protect its official partners and sponsors and give them exclusive visibility at stadiums. For the same reason, stadiums named after a sponsor — such as Gillette Stadium near Boston — have been renamed for the tournament by FIFA, which is instead using generic names.
Wondering how fans of these top European soccer nations can be spending so many weeks in North America, are you? Well, the Europeans do love their soccer and this supersized tournament will have been in the diary for years. The amount of vacation days employees get vary from country to country. In the U.K, for example, most workers receive at least 28 days of paid annual leave per year. In France, they get a minimum of 30 working days. In Spain, it's 22.
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AP World Cup: https://apnews.com/fifa-world-cup








