Indoor soccer

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

This article is primarily regarding indoor soccer as played in North America. Indoor soccer may also be used as a generic term for versions of association football (soccer) played indoors; see futsal and five-a-side football for similar games.
An indoor soccer game in Mexico. The referee has just awarded the red team a free kick.
An indoor soccer game in Singapore

Indoor soccer or Indoor football is a game derived from association football (soccer) adapted for play in an indoor arena such as a turf-covered hockey arena or skating rink.

Indoor soccer is a somewhat common sport in the United States and Canada with both amateur and professional leagues dedicated to it. Indoor Soccer is also played outside of these two countries, though outside of North America most indoor play involves the FIFA-sanctioned game of futsal. Recently indoor soccer has become a popular sport in Mexico, being included as part of the Universiada (University National Games) and the CONADEIP (Private School Tournament), which match University school teams from all over Mexico. In Mexico, indoor soccer fields are commonly built outdoors, and the sport is known as fútbol rápido ("fast football"). In Brazil it's called "Futebol Society" or "Showbol".

Contents

Rules

Diagram of a possible North American indoor soccer field

Rules vary between governing bodies, but some of the nearly universal rule deviations from association football include:

Beyond these common threads, the sport is structured according to the idiosyncrasies of individual leagues. Most of these rules are adopted from other arena sports like ice hockey. Below is a listing of some of the more common ones:

Leagues

North America

Europe

Proposed

Former

Notes

  1. ^ PASL
  2. ^ www.ligafutbolindoor.com
  3. ^ [1]