Quote:
Originally Posted by Adaaaaaaaaaaaaam
Exactly, so he would be offside after playing the 1st pass, the 1st player runs past defender, and then by the time the ball gets to the 2nd player, he is past and offside.
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If you do it over short distances the return pass usually gets played before he is offside. If the passing is over longer distances then there is more time involved and therefore more chance of being called offside. Generally though someone controlling the defender will run backwards and try and intercept rather than try and play the striker offside so you get more time for the return ball too.
OP you can use either throughball or pass for the return ball, each has its uses but I'd use thethroughball if you're trying to get through on goal.