Edward McMuffin Pants aka the Roger the Dragon
Martain Brouder was the first to score a goal, it was on an empty net late in a game.
yes he can
In a game, the goalie can accidentally score on his or her own goal. If they try to stop a shot and it bounces off of them and goes fully past the goal line, then it does count as a goal for the opposing team. The goalie is also allowed to leave the crease and in some rare cases can actually go up and score in the other team's goalie.
no, he is a goalie
If the net is empty have the goalie dump the puck toward the other goal and cross your fingers.
Trick question- it was an empty nety goal
I don't think there's a time where you can't score a goal, except when the goalie has the ball in his/her hands, or when you're starting the ball in the middle of the field.
The New York Islanders' goalie Billy Smith. Though he didn't actually shoot the puck into the opponent's net. The guy was one of the filthiest goalies of all-time. The first goaltender to score directly into the opposite goal was Philadelphia's Ron Hextall. Note, not quite the psychopath Smith was, but close nonetheless.
Kicking a soccer ball past the goalie to score a goal. Apex
The first Goalie to score a goal was Ron Hextall on December 8, 1987. If you don't count the Islander's goalie scoring on himself. EDIT: It has happened a few times. There are instances where the goalie did not shoot the puck into the net, but was the alst person to touch before the other team accidentally scored on themselves. Here is a list http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_goaltenders_who_have_scored_a_goal_in_an_NHL_game
The laws do not prevent a goal from being scored from a goal keeper's throw.In practice no goal keeper can throw it that far, so there are no known examples.
There is no NHL definition or rule of a shot, therefore, a shot on goal is up to the discretion of the official scorer. But in general terms, a shot on goal is a shot that is taken with the intent to score that either goes into the net for a goal or the goalie saves from going into the net for a goal. A shot that hits the goalpost or crossbar, or a shot the goalie stops that would not have gone in the net is not considered a shot on goal. A clearing pass that goes through everybody and winds up being stopped by the goalie is not considered a shot on goal because there was not intent by the 'shooter' to score a goal. Similarly an errant pass from a teammate that is stopped by the goalie is not considered a shot on goal.