Easy Guide to Lining
Reproduced with
thanks to Warrington RA
ASSISTANT
REFEREES
By Ian Bonney
The position you hold as an Assistant Referee is just
as important as that of a Referee. Also it is my
belief that the job of an Assistant Referee can be
more difficult but more enjoyable than that of a
Referee during a cup final
Firstly we will list the different signals that the
Assistant Referee will make
Watch for the
flag up!
This is the most basic signal the Assistant will
make. By putting the flag up, they are indicating to
the Referee that play needs to be stopped for some
reason. Typically, when the Assistant sees something,
they will put up the flag and, after the Referee
blows the whistle, will indicate what they saw. If
the Referee does not see the flag, the Assistant will
typically begin waving it to attract the Referee's
eye

One of the two main jobs of the Assistant is to
indicate when the ball is out of bounds and how the
game should proceed. Once the Referee has blown the
whistle, the Assistant will indicate how to proceed:
If the Assistant raises the flag at a 45-degree angle
and points it horizontally along the touchline, they
are indicating a throw-in. The team attacking in the
direction they are pointing takes the throw
If the Assistant stands near the goal line and points
at the goal, they are signalling for a goal kick
If the Assistant stands near the goal line and points
at the corner flag, they are signalling for a corner
kick
Watch for offside
This is initially indicated by a flag straight up in
the air, to indicate to the Referee that play must be
halted. When the Referee calls the offside with a
whistle, the Assistant then holds the flag in one of
three positions in front of them to indicate where on
the field the offside occurred, and thus where the
ball should be placed for the free kick
The below signal is the first signal you should adopt
when giving offside:
Then you should adopt one of the following three
signals depending on the position on the pitch that
the offside occurs in comparison to your position
Watch for substitutions
If the Assistant holds his flag above his head with
both hands, he is indicating to the Referee that a
substitution is being performed and that play should
not be started until it is finished
Watch for the goal signal
When the Assistant thinks a goal has been scored,
they will lower the flag, optionally may point to
center with their hand, and sprint back to the centre
line. If they want to dispute the goal however, they
will put the flag up and stay where they are
The Free Kick signal
When the Assistant Referee believes a foul has been
committed, he will wave the flag repeatedly
to attract the Referee’s attention. Please be ready
for your Referee to play an advantage and in this
case the Assistant will put down the flag and
continue moving forward to get back level with
the second last defender
Watch for the penalty kick signal
This can vary from region to region. Generally, if a
foul is called by the Referee and it is inside the
penalty area the AR will move toward the
corner flag. If the AR stays where they are then
it indicates the foul was outside the penalty area.
The Referee can then determine the appropriate
restart. Other possible signals for penalty kicks
include holding the flag horizontally across the
chest or running to the corner flag and hiding their
flag behind their back
To flag for the penalty, this is the signal you will
adopt:
Watch for the miscellaneous signal
When the Assistant simply keeps the flag straight up
after the whistle is blown, he is indicating he needs
to talk to the Referee. The Assistant may show this
signal if, for example, a player begins abusing him
or he sees outside interference. In particular, if he
wishes to indicate that a player deserves a yellow or
red card, he will place his hand over his chest badge
When looking for offside ...
... do not forget that we must also consider whether
the player is interfering with play or if they are
taking part in that particular phase in play. The way
that a player would interfere with play is:
• If the player touches the ball from an offside
position
• If they affect a defenders movement within that
phase of play when being offside
• If they obscure the view of a Goalkeeper from a
goal-bound effort
You should also remember that a player is not offside
in the following cases:
• He is in his own half of the field of play
• He is level with the second last defender
• He is level with the last two opponents
When the ball is played by the red number 11, the red
number 10 is clearly offside. In this case the
Assistant Referee will raise his flag and signal the
offside and the Referee will award an indirect
free-kick to the blue team. However in this case if
the ball is played through and the red number 8
receives the pass, it is play on as red number 10 is
not interfering with play
In this instance the blue number 3 has failed to move
up with the rest of his defensive line. In this case
no decision is given, and the Referee allows play on
and allows the red number 9 is allowed to continue
In this instance, despite the number 9 being in front
of the blue number 4, the decision is an offside. The
reason in this case is that no goalkeeper is in the
goal for the blue team. This is where the
phrase 'second last defender' comes from as the
last defender is the goalkeeper

