Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Soccer/Answer Key"

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==1. Know the basic rules of soccer. ==
 
==1. Know the basic rules of soccer. ==
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Soccer is played between teams of even numbers (at the professional level, eleven), and the object for each team is to control a ball and place it into the opposing team's net. The team that scores the most of these goals, wins. Note that matches may also end in a draw. Players may control the ball with any part of their body except their hands and arms, with the exception of one player on each team designated the goalkeeper, who may handle the ball within a certain "penalty" area in front of the net that he is guarding.
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Like in basketball, contact between opposing players with the intent of causing harm to a player or disrupting his team's strategy is not allowed. A referee observes the game and stops play for any such fouls, and in the event of a foul, orders a free kick of the ball from the spot where the foul is suffered by the team whose player suffers the foul. A foul committed by player in his own penalty area results in a penalty kick from a designated spot in front of the goalkeeper and the goal. Fouls may also be given for unsportsmanlike conduct. At the referee's discretion, he may also "book" a player for a malicious foul by awarding a yellow card, or a red card for more egregious offenses. Two yellow cards or one red card results in the player's expulsion from the game, in which case the ejected player cannot be replaced.
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Free kicks may also be awarded in the event that a player or players are found to be offsides, in which offenders place themselves ahead of the ball as well as the last opposing field player. The disallowing of offsides is to prevent players from camping out in front of an opponent's net.
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Other stoppages include throw-ins, where a ball that has traveled beyond the boundary of the playing field is thrown back into play by the team whose opponent last touched the ball, goal kicks, where a ball that has traveled beyond the end line of the field is returned to play by the goalkeeper if the attacking team is the last to touch it, and corner kicks, where a ball that has traveled beyond the end line is kicked back into play from the nearest corner flag by a field player whose opponent last touched it.
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==2. What is the meaning of “Good Sportsmanship?” ==
 
==2. What is the meaning of “Good Sportsmanship?” ==
 
==3. Make a drawing of the soccer playing field. ==
 
==3. Make a drawing of the soccer playing field. ==

Revision as of 18:34, 12 April 2007

Template:Honor header

1. Know the basic rules of soccer.

Soccer is played between teams of even numbers (at the professional level, eleven), and the object for each team is to control a ball and place it into the opposing team's net. The team that scores the most of these goals, wins. Note that matches may also end in a draw. Players may control the ball with any part of their body except their hands and arms, with the exception of one player on each team designated the goalkeeper, who may handle the ball within a certain "penalty" area in front of the net that he is guarding.

Like in basketball, contact between opposing players with the intent of causing harm to a player or disrupting his team's strategy is not allowed. A referee observes the game and stops play for any such fouls, and in the event of a foul, orders a free kick of the ball from the spot where the foul is suffered by the team whose player suffers the foul. A foul committed by player in his own penalty area results in a penalty kick from a designated spot in front of the goalkeeper and the goal. Fouls may also be given for unsportsmanlike conduct. At the referee's discretion, he may also "book" a player for a malicious foul by awarding a yellow card, or a red card for more egregious offenses. Two yellow cards or one red card results in the player's expulsion from the game, in which case the ejected player cannot be replaced.

Free kicks may also be awarded in the event that a player or players are found to be offsides, in which offenders place themselves ahead of the ball as well as the last opposing field player. The disallowing of offsides is to prevent players from camping out in front of an opponent's net.

Other stoppages include throw-ins, where a ball that has traveled beyond the boundary of the playing field is thrown back into play by the team whose opponent last touched the ball, goal kicks, where a ball that has traveled beyond the end line of the field is returned to play by the goalkeeper if the attacking team is the last to touch it, and corner kicks, where a ball that has traveled beyond the end line is kicked back into play from the nearest corner flag by a field player whose opponent last touched it.

2. What is the meaning of “Good Sportsmanship?”

3. Make a drawing of the soccer playing field.

4. Demonstrate reasonable skill in playing the game of soccer.

5. Describe the different skills required at each position.

6. Know the meaning of and the Referee signals for the following:

a. Off sides

b. Holding

c. Corner kick

d. Indirect kick

e. Direct kick

f. Goal

7. Define the following terms:

a. Advantage

b. Booking

c. Clearing

d. Corner Arcs

e. Cross

f. Dribble

g. Drop ball

h. Drop kick

i. Dummy

j. Half volley

k. Touch

l. Volley

m. Heading

n. Juggling

o. Marking

p. Nutmeg

q. Out-of-bounds

r. Pass back

s. Penalty area

t. Slide tackle

u. Tackle

v. Throw

w. Trapping

x. Wall

8. Spend at least 4 hours helping less skilled or younger players improve their skills.

9. Play a least 5 games with family or friends. Show good sportsmanship during your practice and games.

10. Write a one page report on a famous soccer player. Discuss why they are or are not a good Christian role model.

11. Discuss with your Pathfinder leader, pastor or teacher the problems facing a Seventh-day Adventist youth considering sports in Jr. High, High School or college. What alternatives are there that allows for continued activity in sports.

References