The Core Playbook
First thing: the match is 90 minutes, split in two halves. No fluff, just a clock ticking down, two fifteen‑minute breaks, and a sudden‑death overtime if the knockout stage demands it.
Off‑Side and the Goal Line
Off‑side is the rule that trips most newbies. Picture a traffic light: when the ball is played, the attacker must have at least two feet behind the second-last defender. If not, the referee blows the whistle, and the ball resets. Simple, right? Wrong—because the eyes of the assistant referee are perched on the line, and they’re quicker than a cat on a hot tin roof.
Penalties and Extras
Now, penalties. No drama, just a spot‑kick from twelve meters, twelve seconds to line up, and the keeper can move after the ball is struck. Miss it, and the other team gets a free kick from the same spot. Extra time is two five‑minute halves, but if you’re watching a knockout game, expect a penalty shoot‑out if the dead‑lock persists.
Instant Replay and VAR
VAR—Video Assistant Referee—is the digital referee’s brain. It steps in for goals, penalties, red cards, and mistaken identity. The on‑field referee gets a quick look, then either a nod or a shake of the head. If you see a pause, that’s VAR at work; if the crowd erupts, something just got reviewed.
Set Pieces and Free Kicks
Free kicks come in two flavors: direct (you can shoot straight) and indirect (someone else must touch it first). The wall forms, the kicker lines up, and the goalkeeper judges the trajectory. It’s a chess match on grass, and the rules dictate whether the ball must travel a certain distance before a teammate can play it.
Substitutions and Squad Limits
Each team gets five changes in a match. No more, no less. The bench is a revolving door, and the manager can shuffle players at any stoppage. The squad is capped at 26 players for the tournament; keep that in mind when you’re counting heads.
Quick Tips for the First Match
Show the newbie the corner flag, point out the half‑way line, whisper: “the ball stays in play until the ref says otherwise.” Then, let them experience a free kick. The roar of the crowd, the tension of a penalty—those are the moments that cement the rules in the brain.
And here’s the deal: when you’re walking a fresh fan past the stadium gates, just point to the referee’s watch, signal the 45‑minute mark, and let the game speak for itself. Give them the rulebook in bite‑size pieces, and they’ll be chanting “goal!” before the final whistle. Start now.
