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Sports

Which sport is linked to the term "offside"?

"Football" is correct: In football, the offside rule governs when an attacking player cannot receive the ball Football uses offside to judge attacks and positions according to the rules Football - Option: Football "Football" - target In football, the offside

Football medium

Answer options

  • Correct: Football
    "Football" - target F1: In football, the offside rule governs when an attacking player. F2: Football uses the technical term offside. F3: The task targets this mapping, and Football remains correct in this prompt. F4: Football remains tied to the requested relation through inverse in the graph profile.
  • Option: Cycling
    "Cycling" vs. "Football" F1: In cycling, the peloton refers to the main group of riders. F2: Cycling uses the technical term peloton. F3: The task targets this mapping, so Cycling remains wrong in this prompt. F4: Cycling stays relevant in the graph profile but does not carry the requested relation.
  • Option: Tennis
    "Tennis" vs. "Football" F1: Tennis uses the tiebreak to decide a set without endless games. F2: Tennis uses the technical term tiebreak. F3: The task targets this mapping, so Tennis remains wrong in this prompt. F4: Tennis stays relevant in the graph profile but does not carry the requested relation.
  • Option: Fencing
    "Fencing" vs. "Football" F1: In fencing, a riposte is the immediate counterattack after a. F2: Fencing uses the technical term riposte. F3: The task targets this mapping, so Fencing remains wrong in this prompt. F4: Fencing stays relevant in the graph profile but does not carry the requested relation.

Solution

Football

"Football" is correct: In football, the offside rule governs when an attacking player cannot receive the ball. The prompt targets Football, so the graph keeps this mapping stable against close alternatives. Path: Football via an inverse graph mapping. Source: Wikidata. As of: 2026-02-13.

Fun fact

Football uses offside to judge attacks and positions according to the rules. Football stays anchored with additional dataset context. Topic tie-in: DATA-079 graph overlay en. The graph therefore uses an inverse graph mapping.

Category:Sports
Path:/en/question/which-sport-is-linked-to-the-term-offside--sport-term-to-sport/

Knowledge panorama

Option OptionProfileRelationTargetCategoryCore factContextContrastResolutionSource
Football Football"Football" - targettopic relationWhich sport is linked to the term "offside"?SportIn football, the offside rule governs when an attacking playerFootball uses the technical term offsideThe task targets this mapping, and Football remains correct in this promptFootball remains tied to the requested relation through inverse in the graph profileWikidata (2026-02-13)
Cycling Cycling"Cycling" vs. "Football"topic relationWhich sport is linked to the term "offside"?SportIn cycling, the peloton refers to the main group of ridersCycling uses the technical term pelotonThe task targets this mapping, so Cycling remains wrong in this promptCycling stays relevant in the graph profile but does not carry the requested relationWikidata (2026-02-13)
Tennis Tennis"Tennis" vs. "Football"topic relationWhich sport is linked to the term "offside"?SportTennis uses the tiebreak to decide a set without endless gamesTennis uses the technical term tiebreakThe task targets this mapping, so Tennis remains wrong in this promptTennis stays relevant in the graph profile but does not carry the requested relationWikidata (2026-02-13)
Fencing Fencing"Fencing" vs. "Football"topic relationWhich sport is linked to the term "offside"?SportIn fencing, a riposte is the immediate counterattack after aFencing uses the technical term riposteThe task targets this mapping, so Fencing remains wrong in this promptFencing stays relevant in the graph profile but does not carry the requested relationWikidata (2026-02-13)