Own goal


 
 

An own goal occurs in association football (soccer) when a player kicks or otherwise causes the ball to go into his own side's goal, thus resulting in a goal being scored for the opposition. The player who does this is personally "credited" with the goal as part of the statistical abstract of the game. The term has become a metaphor (in countries where football is the most popular sport) for any action that backfires on a person.

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An own goal cannot be scored directly from a throw-in or a free-kick, and under certain other circumstances: the laws of soccer should be consulted for a detailed explanation of the circumstances under which an apparent own goal will not be counted as a score.

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Own goals in other sports are rare, and when they occur, they are not "credited" in the same manner as in football. For example, in hockey, if a goal is scored by a player on the defending team, credit for the goal goes to the last player on the other team to have touched the puck. In basketball, when accidentally scoring at an opposing team's basket (basketball's equivalent of an "own goal"), the closest player to the rim from the opposing team is credited with the basket. In American football and Canadian football, when a ball-carrier is tackled or exits the field of play within the end zone being defended by his team, the result is a safety and the opposing team is awarded two points.

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Own goals can result in incidents of violence in sports. Colombia national football team member Andr?s Escobar scored an own goal in a match with the United States in the 1994 World Cup, resulting in an upset win for the United States and Colombia's dismissal in the first round. Escobar was murdered shortly after his return to Colombia.

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Association football (soccer): REDIRECT Association football...

Goal: Goal may refer to:...

Metaphor: In language, a metaphor is a rhetorical trope defined as a direct comparison between two seemingly unrelated subjects. Typically, a first object is described as being or having the properties of a second object. In this way, the first object can be economically described because implicit and explici...


Own goal related Images and Photos (experimental)

Goal
Goal
Goal! The World Cup  1967
Goal! The World Cup 1967
Goal 2- Living The Dream
Goal 2- Living The Dream
Business-Management: Goal Setting
Business-Management: Goal Setting
Scoring a Goal
Scoring a Goal
Peter Mueller  Goal Celebration
Peter Mueller Goal Celebration
Ben Eager Goal Game Two of the 2010 NHL Stanley Cup Finals
Ben Eager Goal Game Two of the 2010 NHL Stanley Cup Finals
Basketball Goal Standing by Itself in the Middle of a Blizzard
Basketball Goal Standing by Itself in the Middle of a Blizzard
Troy Brouwer & Marian Hossa Goal Game One of the 2010 NHL Stanley Cup Finals
Troy Brouwer & Marian Hossa Goal Game One of the 2010 NHL Stanley Cup Finals
Ruslan Fedotenko - '04 Stanley Cup - Goal Celebration (#09) ©Photofile
Ruslan Fedotenko - '04 Stanley Cup - Goal Celebration (#09) ©Photofile
Marco Sturm Game Winning Goal Vertical 2010 NHL Winter Classic
Marco Sturm Game Winning Goal Vertical 2010 NHL Winter Classic
Marco Sturm Game Winning Goal Horizontal 2010 NHL Winter Classic
Marco Sturm Game Winning Goal Horizontal 2010 NHL Winter Classic

~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
 


 

~ Related Subjects ~

Goal (2) - Rhetoric (1) - Trope (1) - 1994 World Cup (1) - Andr?s Escobar (1) - United States (1) - This concept (1) - Simile (1) - Analogy (1) - Comparison (1) - Cognitive linguistics (1) - Puck (1) - Basketball (1) - Hockey (1) - Association football (soccer) (1) -
 

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