Among the modifications are a reduced field of play, a reduction in the number of players, elimination of the offside rule, and permission for one-handed throw-ins.
Matches consist of two thirty-minute halves, with a fifteen-minute half-time break.
In January 2015, governance of the sport was taken over by the International Federation of Cerebral Palsy Football.
For New South Wales, this is Cerebral Palsy Sporting and Recreation Association NSW.
In Western Australia, the sport is governed by Football West.
[3][2] The goal and the field are also smaller than the non-disability association football game.
This extra time consists of two 10-minute periods, where the first goal scored wins the game.
If there is still a draw following those 20 minutes of play, a penalty shoot out takes place.
[4] The first CPISRA World Championships took place in Denmark in 1982, four years after the first international competition for the sport took place in Scotland at the Cerebral Palsy International Games.