Replying to Avatar 0xtr

This was harder to articulate than I thought it would bešŸ˜‚

So usually, if someone passes the ball to someone that’s behind enemy defense players, it’s an offside. Let’s say Messi is lurking a couple of feet behind the most defensive opposing player. If someone else passes the ball to him, he can’t catch the ball because he was offside when the pass was done. He’d have to be right beside the defensive player or in front of him at the time of the pass to be onside. Does that make any sense to you?

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MAKE SONGS LONGER 1y ago

That does, thank you! That’s a good explanation. Because offsides means something totally different in American football.

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0xtr 1y ago

I’m not too familiar with American football, how does offsides work there?

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Derek Ross 1y ago

Wait. Soccer or football? I'm talking about ⚽ šŸ˜‚

Green circle with the arrow is offsides. https://nostrcheck.me/media/3f770d65d3a764a9c5cb503ae123e62ec7598ad035d836e2a810f3877a745b24/d68cb26bacd9b5673d3c9da886b5ac54a8f569492da45e541d9498fd05d3188f.webp

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0xtr 1y ago

I was talking about āš½ļø too but nostr:npub1nl8r463jkdtr0qu0k3dht03jt9t59cttk0j8gtxg9wea2russlnq2zf9d0 mentioned šŸˆ so I was wondering how offsides worked therešŸ˜‚

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