If the keeper drops the ball and then kicks it before it touches the ground, it is called a punt.
It depends on how the goalkeeper received it. If the goalkeeper received it from a deliberate kick or a throw-in by a team-mate, then no. Otherwise, yes.
It is legal for a teammate to kick the ball to their own goal keeper. The goalkeeper would not be allowed to use their hands. If they do so, then it would be an indirect free kick for the opponents at the location the goalkeeper touched the ball. A penalty kick would not be awarded.
No, the goalie is not allowed to touch the ball in their hands if the last person to kick the ball is their teamate.
Yes a goalie can score goal from a goal kick if he is kicking it from his hands.
Yes, a goalkeeper may score a goal by drop-kicking the ball. The only times that a goal cannot be scored is directly from a throw-in, an indirect free kick, and immediately after an offensive foul or infraction.
yes!
A direct free kick.
It is not allowed for a goal keeper to take possession of the ball with his hands if it has been deliberately kicked to him from the feet of a team-mate. To do so is an indirect free kick offense.
A goalie can use their hands to touch or pick up the ball when the ball is within their penalty area, they havenβt received it directly from a back pass or throw-in from a member of their own team, and they havenβt just dropped the ball from their hands. Sure, when the referee calls for a kick off or goal kick or something, the goalie should obey their command and do whatever needed with the ball.
Either a goalkick(from the line) or a punt (out of his hands).
It will be a indirect free kick.
Yes, a goalkeeper can take penalties.