It must be going fast enough to break flexible material, no matter how quickly it can stretch out to absorb all the energy being suddenly slammed into it. It undoubtedly must being going faster than a racecar.
In soccer, the entire ball must cross the goal line for a goal to be awarded or for the ball to be considered out of play.
This is not a goal, the only thing that matters is the ball. For a goal to be scored the whole ball must have crossed the line.
No, the ball must completely cross the goal line before a goal is awarded.
Yes, in football, the ball must fully cross the goal line between the goalposts for a goal to be scored.
No. All parts of the ball must be past all parts of the line.
When any part of the ball or any part of the ball carrier touches the out of bounds line, the ball is out of play.
No, in order to score a goal, all you need is for the ball to fully cross the goal line. Even if the goalie stops the ball from hitting the net, it is still a goal if the ball has crossed the line.
In netball, GD (goal defence) defends the goal attack and trys to stop them getting the ball down the court. If the goal attack gets the ball into the circle and under the ring then the goal defence must defend him/her and attempt to catch the rebound if the shot misses. The goal defence must then help to pass the ball back down the court to their attacking team members.
Yes, in soccer, the ball must fully cross the goal line between the goalposts and under the crossbar to score a goal. It does not have to hit the net to count as a goal.
In netball, you cannot score a goal directly from a throw from the centre third. The ball must be passed to a player within the attacking circle, and only players in the shooting positions can attempt to score. Therefore, the ball must be brought into the goal circle before a shot can be taken.
When the ball travels completely across the goal line. It can go in by kicking it or heading it. Players must stay onsides to call it a goal.
No, it must leave the penalty area to be in play.