Field Hockey Rules

Rules explained in plain English for parents learning Field Hockey.

1

Rules Vary By Age And Format

Youth field hockey rules can change by age group, field size, player count, goalie availability, surface, and local organization.

Parent tip: Do not compare every call to college, international, indoor, or ice hockey rules. Ask for your team's local rule sheet.

Example: A younger league may play small-sided with no goalie while an older division uses a full field, goalkeepers, penalty corners, and stricter restart spacing.

Age note: All youth levels.

2

Stick Use And Ball Control

Players use a field hockey stick to dribble, pass, receive, tackle, and shoot the ball under sport-specific stick rules.

Parent tip: This is field hockey, not ice hockey. Watch controlled stick skills near the ground rather than puck handling, body checking, or rink-board play.

Example: A player taps the ball forward, looks up, and passes along the turf to a teammate.

Age note: All youth levels.

3

Goals

A goal is scored when the ball legally crosses the goal line into the cage under the local scoring rule.

Parent tip: Wait for the official's goal signal because the ball entering the cage does not always mean the score counts.

Example: The ball is played by an attacker in the circle and crosses the goal line, so the official awards a goal.

Age note: All youth levels.

4

Shooting Circle

The shooting circle is the marked area around the goal where many rule sets require an attacking touch before a goal can count.

Parent tip: A shot from outside the circle may be waved off even if it reaches the cage. That is often a circle rule, not a mistake by the scorekeeper.

Example: A defender clears a long ball that rolls into the goal without an attacking touch inside the circle, and the official signals no goal.

Age note: All youth levels; exact scoring rule can vary.

5

Free Hits

A free hit is a restart awarded after many fouls or out-of-play situations.

Parent tip: Look for where the official places the ball and which direction they point. Defenders usually need to give space before challenging.

Example: After obstruction, the official awards a free hit to the defense.

Age note: All youth levels.

6

Self-Starts And Passing Restarts

Some formats allow the awarded player to start dribbling from a free hit, while others require a pass or more structured restart.

Parent tip: This rule varies a lot for younger players. Ask whether self-starts are allowed and what spacing defenders must give.

Example: A midfielder takes a free hit by moving the ball herself before passing wide.

Age note: Format-specific.

7

Sidelines And Hit-Ins

When the ball goes over the sideline, the team that did not touch it last usually restarts with a hit-in or side-in.

Parent tip: Sideline restarts can happen quickly, so watch the direction signal and the ball placement near the line.

Example: A defender's stick deflects the ball out, and the attacking team restarts from the sideline.

Age note: All youth levels.

8

Penalty Corners

A penalty corner is an attacking restart near the goal for certain defensive fouls, often with players set in specific places around the circle.

Parent tip: This is one of the most structured moments in field hockey. Younger leagues may simplify setup, spacing, or shot rules for safety.

Example: A defender commits a foul in the shooting circle, and the attack sets up for a penalty corner.

Age note: Format-specific; common in older youth play.

9

Penalty Strokes

A penalty stroke is a major scoring chance awarded for certain serious fouls that stop a likely goal or occur in key scoring situations.

Parent tip: Penalty strokes are not the same as penalty corners. They usually involve one shooter and the goalkeeper under official control.

Example: A defender illegally stops a likely goal, and the official awards a penalty stroke.

Age note: Older or more structured youth formats.

10

Obstruction

Obstruction is called when a player unfairly blocks an opponent's legal path to the ball with the body or stick position.

Parent tip: From the sideline, shielding can look like strong possession. The official is judging whether the opponent had a fair chance to play the ball.

Example: A player turns the back to a defender and blocks access to the ball, so the official awards a free hit.

Age note: All youth levels.

11

Dangerous Play

Dangerous play covers unsafe stick use, raised balls, hard hits into traffic, or challenges that put players at risk under local rules.

Parent tip: Safety calls are not the moment for sideline arguing. Let coaches and officials explain what was unsafe.

Example: A player swings through a crowd and the official stops play for dangerous play.

Age note: All youth levels; strictness varies by age.

12

Foot Fouls

A foot foul may be called when the ball contacts a player's foot and affects play under the local rule.

Parent tip: Young players are learning footwork, so accidental foot contact is common. Watch whether the official sees an advantage or stops play.

Example: The ball hits a defender's foot in the circle and prevents a pass, so the official awards the attack a restart.

Age note: All youth levels.

13

Substitutions

Many youth field hockey games allow substitutions during play, though timing, location, and goalie rules can vary.

Parent tip: Ask where players enter and exit, whether substitutions are rolling, and whether special rules apply during penalty corners or for goalkeepers.

Example: A coach sends in fresh midfielders through the substitution area while play continues.

Age note: All youth levels; local procedures vary.

14

Goalie Availability And Goalkeeper Rules

Some youth teams use fully equipped goalkeepers, some rotate keepers, and some small-sided formats play without a goalie.

Parent tip: Do not assume every division has the same goalkeeper equipment or privileges. Confirm the local format before game day.

Example: A small-sided clinic uses empty goals while an older team uses a padded goalkeeper who can play the ball differently in the circle.

Age note: All youth levels; format-specific.

15

Distance And Restart Safety

Defenders often must give required space on free hits, hit-ins, and circle restarts before they can challenge.

Parent tip: Required distance can vary by age and format. If the whistle repeats after a restart, spacing may be the reason.

Example: A defender stands too close to a free hit, and the official moves the defense back before play resumes.

Age note: All youth levels.