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WFA Law – DOGSO Explained

DOGSO stands for Denying an Obvious Goal Scoring Opportunity. It is one of the most serious offences in walking football because it involves stopping a clear chance to score by unfair or illegal means.

This law exists to prevent deliberate “professional fouls” and keep the game fair.


What Is a DOGSO Offence?

A DOGSO offence occurs when a player unfairly stops an opponent who has a clear chance to score. This can include:

  • Fouling an attacker moving towards goal

  • Running offences that block a clear chance

  • Deliberate handball on a goal-bound shot


Red Cards and Blue Cards

Normally, a DOGSO offence results in a red card and a penalty kick.

However, if the referee believes the foul was a genuine attempt to play the ball, the referee may issue a blue card instead, while still awarding a penalty kick.

All other DOGSO offences must result in a red card.


Handball DOGSO

Outfield players who deliberately handle a goal-bound shot commit a DOGSO offence.
Goalkeepers may also commit DOGSO if they deliberately handle the ball outside the goal area.


Momentum Exception

If a goalkeeper makes a legal save inside the goal area and their momentum carries the ball outside the area, this is not DOGSO. Play restarts with a penalty kick.


The Four D’s Test

Referees assess four key factors:

FactorMeaning
DefendersOnly the goalkeeper or one defender between attacker and goal
Distance to BallAttacker close enough to control the ball
Distance to GoalAttacker close enough to score
DirectionAttacker moving towards goal

If all four apply, it is DOGSO.


Restart After DOGSO

All DOGSO offences restart with a penalty kick and appropriate disciplinary action.


Part of the official WFA Walking Football Rules Hub:
👉 /walking-football-rules/

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