Home Sports New offside rule could benefit attackers
Sports

New offside rule could benefit attackers

Share
Clear daylight, clearer calls. The proposed 2026/27 offside rule shows the difference between onside and offside – giving attackers the edge and ending millimetre-thin decisions. (Courtesy pic)
Share

MBABANE – Football is set for one of its biggest law shifts, with a new offside rule expected in 2026/27.

The proposed change would mean a striker is only offside if their entire body that can score is in front of the last defender, rather than just a part of it.

For years, marginal offsides – where goals were disallowed by a toe, shoulder or fraction – have irked strikers and fans alike.

In the English Premier League alone, there have been notable goals ruled out because part of the attacker was offside by a few centimetres – such as headers or close finishes involving players like Erling Haaland.

 Former Arsenal Manager and an International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) Head of Global Football Development Arsène Wenger argues this change would restore the old advantage to attackers and reduce frustration caused by video assistant referees’ ultra-precise offside decisions, saying the doubt benefits the striker should be reinstated.

The impact of the change would be felt across the pitch. Strikers would gain confidence to time runs without fear of being penalised on the smallest margins – potentially leading to more goals and fluid attacking play. Defenders, by contrast, would face tougher tasks, needing sharper organisation, anticipation and positional awareness to manage deeper lines and shifting threats.

At home in Eswatini, MTN Premier League joint top scorers have welcomed the idea. Hleliso Gamedze of Rangers, with 10 goals this season, said the change ‘is a welcome change and we are looking forward to when it is implemented,’ adding that while the amendment is good for strikers, ‘it will render defenders to work overtime.’

Fellow leading scorer Malangeni Dlamini, also on 10 goals, agreed: “It was long overdue, as at some point goals were disallowed because you were forward by a hand, leg or half fraction of the body – it was discouraging. We look forward to the changes and I guess it will help us to score more goals.”

*Full article available in our publication

 

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Don't Miss

Maloma Colliery calls for calm as wage talks continue

MBABANE - Maloma Colliery Ltd has offered employees a cumulative nine per cent salary increase over two years, but wage negotiations have reached...

Swazipharm blames ministry delays, commits to compliance

LOBAMBA – After being implicated in the delivery of medical drugs that were later recalled, prominent pharmaceutical supplier Swazipharm has reaffirmed its commitment...

DNA plan could swallow E126m of Home Affairs budget

MBABANE – Making DNA testing compulsory before issuing birth certificates could cost taxpayers about E126 million annually, enough to fund free Grade I...

Shembe forgives Zulu King after video fallout

MBABANE – Members of the Nazareth Baptist Church in Eswatini have rallied behind His Holiness Unyazi Lwezulu Shembe after he publicly forgave Zulu...

Eswatini girls shine at Dance World Cup finals

MBABANE - Eswatini’s young ambassadors represented the nation with flawless charm at the ongoing Dance World finals in Ireland. Talent and Motion shared...

Related Articles

Eswatini giants launch COSANA title defence

MBABANE - Eswatini’s reigning regional netball champions Royal Flames launch their COSANA...

SA coaches to influence Eswatini football – ex-Sihlangu manager

MBABANE – Former Eswatini senior men’s national Team Manager Josiah ‘Digger’ Dlamini...

Southern Africa’s best chess minds head to Eswatini

MBABANE - The Trojan Horse International Chess Open is back and it...

E350k, top coach boost for ‘Bull’!

MBABANE – Capital city giants Mbabane Highlanders will receive a major financial...