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Football 5-a-side made its Paralympic debut at the Athens Games in 2004 and is open to
blind athletes. These are athletes without any vision or light
perception Rules are similar to the FIFA Futsal game
with a few modifications. There are five players on the pitch.
The four outfield players are blind and use eyepatches and eyeshades for fairness.
The goalkeeper may be sighted. The ball, with bells inside, makes noise when
it moves, allowing the footballers to locate it.
Players are not allowed to keep it still at their feet for more than four seconds.
The crowd must also stay quiet until after a goal is scored or the ball is out of play.
Each team also has three sighted guides to give instructions to the players when they
enter their respective third of the pitch. These are the goalkeeper in the defensive
third, coach in midfield and another guide in the attacking third.
A match lasts 50 minutes, consisting of two halves. If a match is drawn after extra time
then like its 11-a-side version, penalties may decide the outcome.
The goalkeeper cannot throw the ball beyond the halfway line in the air, or touch a teammate’s
back pass with his hands. A player must shout clearly and audibly when
trying to take possession of the ball or tackle an opponent.
Most teams use the Spanish word “voy”. Throughout the match fouls are cumulative,
so after a team registers three fouls in any half,
every subsequent foul is punished with a double penalty and a direct shot from 8m out.
There are no offside rules. The field of play is the same size as for
FIFA Futsal: 20m wide and 40m long. The side walls are between 1m and 1.2m high,
meaning the ball cannot go out of play and ensuring a more continuous flow of the game.
The goal is 3m wide and 2m high. Blind football is mesmerising: the skill of
the players astounding the crowd on every occasion.