Soccer players lay down behind a free-kick wall to block a low shot that might go under the jumping defenders. It’s a defensive trick that covers the gap created when the wall jumps to stop a high shot.

How it works

  • The defending team forms a wall to block the direct path to goal.
  • The wall often jumps when the kick is taken, which can leave space near the ground.
  • A player lying flat behind the wall helps stop the ball if the taker tries to sneak it under everyone.

Why teams use it

This tactic became more common as free-kick takers got better at hitting shots over walls and then later started exploiting the ground-level gap. In other words, it’s a response to attackers finding a new route to goal.

Simple example

If the wall jumps and the kicker aims low, the ball can slide beneath the defenders. A player on the ground makes that much harder and gives the goalkeeper a better chance to save it.

Quick note

It looks funny, but it’s not random or lazy; it’s a deliberate set-piece defense.

TL;DR: they lay down to stop low free kicks from sneaking under the wall.