Not with their hands. A goal keeper may only use his hands inside of his own penalty area.
If a defender passes the ball with his feet to the goal keeper, the goal keeper may not touch the ball with their hands.
Yes. The goal keeper can touch the ball with their hands when inside their own penalty area.
GK stands for goal keeper. For goal keeper you can get the ball off the other team and shoot goals so your allowed in the semi circle but your not allowed in the other teams semi circle.
A goal keeper is allowed to touch the ball with their hands when the ball is inside their own penalty area. If a goal keeper does so outside of the area, then a direct free kick is awarded to the opposing team.
No. The goal keeper may only touch the ball with their hands in their own penalty area.
He is in the goal the whole game. He has to keep the ball from getting into the goal. If the ball goes into the goal the other team gets a point and the goalie failed to keep the ball out. The goal keeper is the only one in the whole game (other than the opposite goal keeper) allowed to touch the ball with his/her hands.
The goal keeper.
Not always. A goal keeper may not touch a ball with their hands if it was directly kicked or thrown-in to them by a team-mate.
As long as the ball is inside their penalty area a goal keeper may handle the ball. The position of the ball is important. The position of the goal keeper is not.
The goal keeper may touch the ball with his hands and arms in his team's penalty area.
If the ball is completely outside of the penalty area then the goal keeper may not touch it with his hands. Doing so will result in a direct free kick for the opposition at the location of the touch, just like any other player. Where the goal keeper's body is at the moment of the touch does not matter.
No not at all if it does it will become the other teams turn Im a expert at volleyball