A set piece is any restart of play after the ball has gone out of play or a foul has been committed — throw-ins, corner kicks, goal kicks, free kicks, and penalty kicks. Each restart has specific rules about where the ball is placed, who can take it, and when play resumes.
Throw-In Rules
A throw-in is awarded when the ball crosses the touchline (the long sides of the pitch) in full. The throw is taken by the team that did not touch the ball last before it went out.
Throw-in requirements
- Both feet must remain on or behind the touchline at the moment of delivery
- The ball must be thrown with both hands from behind and over the head
- The thrower must face the field of play
- The ball must be thrown from the point where it crossed the line
- Opponents must stand at least 2 metres from the thrower
Can You Score Directly From a Throw-In?
No — a goal cannot be scored directly from a throw-in. If the ball is thrown directly into the opponent's goal, a goal kick is awarded to the opposing team. If it enters the thrower's own goal, a corner kick is awarded to the opponents. The ball must touch at least one other player before entering either goal.
Can the Goalkeeper Pick Up a Throw-in From a Teammate?
Yes. The goalkeeper can pick up (handle) a throw-in played to them by a teammate. The restriction that prevents goalkeepers from handling back-passes applies only to deliberate kicks — not throw-ins, headers, or chest-downs from teammates. This is a frequently misunderstood distinction.
Corner Kick Rules
A corner kick is awarded when the ball crosses the goal line (the short sides of the pitch, excluding the goal itself) and was last touched by a defending player. The attacking team restarts from the nearest corner arc.
Corner kick requirements
- The ball is placed inside the corner arc (1-metre radius quarter-circle)
- The corner flag post must not be removed
- Opponents must be at least 9.15 metres (10 yards) from the ball until it is in play
- The kicker cannot touch the ball again until another player has touched it
- A goal may be scored directly from a corner kick
Can You Score Directly From a Corner?
Yes — a goal scored directly from a corner kick counts. This is called an "olimpico" goal (named after Cesáreo Onzari, who first scored one in 1924). If the ball swings directly into the net from the corner flag without any other player touching it, the goal stands.
However, if the ball enters the kicker's own goal directly, the attacking team is instead awarded a corner kick from the other end. A corner cannot result in an own goal directly.
Goal Kick Rules
A goal kick is awarded when the ball crosses the goal line last touched by an attacking player. The defending team restarts from anywhere inside their own goal area.
Since the 2019 rule change, players no longer need to wait for the ball to leave the penalty area before touching it — teammates can receive a goal kick inside the penalty area. Opponents must remain outside the penalty area until the ball is in play (once it is clearly kicked and moves).
Penalty Kick Rules
A penalty kick is awarded when a player commits a direct free kick offence inside their own penalty area. The kick is taken from the penalty spot, 11 metres from the goal.
Penalty kick procedure
- Only the designated kicker and the goalkeeper are inside or on the edge of the penalty area
- The goalkeeper must stay on their goal line (between the posts) until the ball is kicked
- All other players must be outside the penalty area and the arc, and behind the penalty spot
- The kicker must move forward — they cannot feint to confuse the goalkeeper after beginning their run-up
- If the ball rebounds from the post or crossbar, the kicker cannot touch it again before another player does
Penalty Shootouts vs In-Match Penalties
An in-match penalty is a direct attempt on goal — if the ball rebounds, play continues. A penalty shootout (used to decide knockout matches after a draw) operates under different rules: the kick is over once the ball stops moving, is saved, or goes out of play. In a shootout, no follow-up is allowed.
Free Kick Rules
Free kicks come in two types: direct and indirect.
A direct free kick can be scored directly — the ball can go straight into the goal without touching another player. Direct free kicks are awarded for physical fouls (kicking, tripping, pushing, striking, handball).
An indirect free kick must touch at least one other player before entering the goal. The referee signals an indirect free kick by holding one arm raised until the second player touches the ball. Indirect free kicks are awarded for technical infringements — offside, dangerous play, impeding an opponent without contact, or goalkeeper infractions.
| Restart | Goal directly? | Offside applies? | GK can handle? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Throw-in | No | No | Yes |
| Corner kick | Yes | No | Yes |
| Goal kick | Yes | No* | Yes |
| Direct free kick | Yes | Yes | No (from teammate) |
| Indirect free kick | No | Yes | No (from teammate) |
| Penalty kick | Yes | N/A | Yes (as defender) |
* Offside cannot be called directly from a goal kick, but applies once the ball has been touched by another player.
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