Everything about Away Goals Rule totally explained
The
away goals rule is a method of
breaking ties in
football and other sports when teams play each other twice, once at each team's home ground. By the away goals rule, the team that has scored more goals (points, baskets) "away from home" will win if scores are otherwise tied. This is sometimes expressed by saying that away goals "count double" in the event of a tie.
The away-goals rule is most often invoked in
two-legged fixtures, where the initial result is determined by the
aggregate score — for example the scores of both games are added together. In many competitions, the away goals rule is the first tie-breaker for such cases, with a
penalty shootout as the second tie-breaker if each team has scored the same number of away goals. Rules vary as to whether the away goals rule applies at the end of normal time of the second leg, or after
extra time, or (most commonly) after both.
The away goals rule is intended to encourage the away team to be more aggressive. In football, at least, it often leads to a nervous first leg; the home team is unwilling to commit large numbers of players in attack lest they concede a goal, whilst the away team attempts to defend and snatch an away goal to aid them in the second leg. Such tactics arguably make the second leg more exciting, after a low-scoring first leg leaves both sides with a chance to win. There is some debate over whether the away goals rule creates an unfair advantage in playing away first, followed by at home — with the other team squandering their home advantage in the first leg due to away goal fears — and this may be a factor in its somewhat patchy adoption for competitions. Anecdotal evidence certainly suggests that most teams feel an away goal puts them in the driving seat.
Usage
The away goals rule is applied in many football competitions that involve two-legged fixtures, including the knockout stages of the
UEFA Champions League and
UEFA Cup, and any two-legged playoffs used in qualification for the
FIFA World Cup or
European Championships.
Not all competitions use the away goals rule. For example, before
2005,
CONMEBOL used neither the away goals rule nor extra time in any of its competitions, such as the
Copa Libertadores. Ties that were level on aggregate went to an immediate penalty shootout. The away goals rule (without extra time) was introduced to the Copa Libertadores in 2005. In
Latin America, an example of a tournament that always has used this rule is
Copa do Brasil (Brazilian Cup).
In
English football, two-legged fixtures in the
League Cup are only subject to the away goals rule after extra time; even if one team leads on away goals after 90 minutes of the second leg, extra time is played regardless.
The semi-finals of the
promotion playoffs in the
Football League, despite being two-legged, ceased to employ the away goals rule from 2000. As away goals scored in extra time counted double, the side finishing lower in the league gained an advantage by playing away in the 2nd leg, thus giving them 30 more minutes to score an away goal. The rescindment of the away goals rule has affected the results of several play-off semi-finals.
The away goals rule is sometimes used in
round robin competitions (for example
leagues or
qualifying groups), where it may be used to
break ties involving more than two teams. For example, in the
Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference, away goals are the sixth tiebreaker, and away goals are the third tiebreaker in the group stage of both the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Cup. In
Group C of the UEFA Champions League 2000–01,
Olympique Lyonnais took the second qualifying spot ahead of
Olympiacos on away goals. Because other tiebreakers take precedence, the away goals rule is rarely invoked in such tournaments. In many group tournaments, the away goals rule is never applicable; for example, in
World Cup qualification.
Anomalies
If the two clubs contesting a two-legged fixture share the same stadium, each club is the home club in one leg, and the rule still applies. For example, the
2003 UEFA Champions League Semi-finals drew
Inter Milan and
A.C. Milan. Both teams play their home games at
San Siro, but one team had to be declared a home team and the other a visitor in the two matches.
- First leg: A.C. Milan 0–0 Inter Milan
- Second leg: Inter Milan 1–1 A.C. Milan
With an aggregate of 1–1, and both teams playing both games at their home ground, A.C. Milan was declared the winner because they were the "away" side in the second game.
In many such cases, most tickets to each leg will be reserved for the "home" side's fans, so the designation isn't simply arbitrary.
More anomalous was a qualification play-off for the
1991 World Youth Championship between and : Australia won on away goals even though, due to security concerns arising from the
First Intifada, Israel's "home" leg was played in Australia. The same situation occurred for the
2010 FIFA World Cup qualification tie between the
Bahamas and the
British Virgin Islands, where the Bahamas advanced on the away goals rule even though both legs were played in the Bahamas.
There has been at least one case of a wrong application of the away goals rule by a referee in an international club tournament. It happened during the second-round tie in the
1971–
72 Cup Winners' Cup between
Rangers and
Sporting Lisbon. This fixture had the following scorelines:
First leg: Rangers 3–2 Sporting
Second leg, after 90 minutes: Sporting 3–2 Rangers
Second leg, after extra time: Sporting 4–3 Rangers
Since the teams were now level 6–6 on aggregate, the referee ordered a penalty shootout, which Sporting won 3–0. However, Rangers appealed the loss on the grounds that the referee shouldn't have ordered the shootout, since the Rangers goal in extra time in Lisbon gave them a lead of 3 away goals to 2. Rangers won the appeal and went on to win the Cup Winners' Cup that season.Further Information
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