get everyone behind the ball

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Kontol

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I hear the commentator say "Manchester United are getting everyone behind the ball".

The verb "get" has lots of meanings, does it mean to retreat in this context? I understand "on the ball" to mean in possession, but the speaker is using the word "behind" here. Does it mean "out of" in the sentence? -- to retreat everyone out of the ball
 
They are moving all their players up the field so that they all have the opportunity to accept a pass. The whole team is attacking.

You could replace "getting" with "putting" but that loses the idea of movement.
 
They are moving all their players up the field so that they all have the opportunity to accept a pass. The whole team is attacking.

That could be what it means but I suspect it has precisely the opposite meaning here, where the whole team is making a concerted and unified effort to defend.
 
That could be what it means but I suspect it has precisely the opposite meaning here, where the whole team is making a concerted and unified effort to defend.
Hmmm. I would expect that to be worded as getting everyone in front of the ball!
 
No, it's very typical football speak. We'd never say 'in front of the ball'.
 
That could be what it mean but I suspect it has precisely the opposite meaning here, where the whole team is making a concerted and unified effort to defend.
So, does "behind the ball" means to lose possesion in their own half?
On the ball = in possession
Behind the ball = lose possession in their own half.
 
No, it means 'in a position between the ball and the home goal line.' When an opposing player is in possession of the ball, a defending team is behind the ball when all players are in defensive positions. That means the attacking team has a full eleven players to penetrate.

The phrase behind the ball is a preposition phrase, not a verb phrase.
 
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