That would depend who took the throw-in. If the throw-in was by the attacking team, then the restart is a goal kick. If the throw-in was by the defending team, then the restart is a corner kick.
If the thrower was an attacker, then it is a goal kick.
If the thrower was a defender, then it is a corner kick.
It is not a goal. It must touch a player.
A goal cannot be scored directly from a throw in. This is the binding rule in this instance. If a player takes a throw in and the ball crosses his own goal line between the uprights and under the crossbar, the ball has crossed the goal line. Because the Laws of the Game state that no goal can be scored from a throw in, the player taking the throw in effectively threw the ball across his own goal line. This will result in a restart with the otherteam taking a corner kick.
It's a throw in. If it goes out on the goal sides it will be a corner kick or a goal kick.
It's a throw in. If it goes out on the goal sides it will be a corner kick or a goal kick.
There are three. There is no offense for receiving the ball directly from a goal kick, corner kick, or a throw-in.
It is neither direct nor indirect. That said, a goal cannot be scored directly from a throw-in. The restart would be the same as if the score was directly from an indirect free kick. If the ball enters the opponent's goal then it's a goal kick for the opponents. If the ball enters the thrower's goal, then it's a corner kick for the opponents.
In theory, yes, but every time you do, the resulting throw-in, corner kick or goal-kick puts the ball in the opposing team's possession.
It is not a goal directly from the throw unless it touches a player before it goes in.
Assuming it has come of an opponent; if it crosses a side line its a throw in, if its a base line it is either a corner (attacking end) or a Goal Kick (defensive end)
The term "goal throw" has no meaning in soccer. A throw in is taken when the ball completely exits the field across the touch line, and it is a means to restart play. A player of the team that did not touch the ball last will take the throw in.
It is quite possible, and even quite legal to take a throw in and have a team mate head the ball into the goal for a score. It's done all the time on a corner kick. The move is called headding the ball. It's quite legal.
A corner kick is awarded when the ball goal out of play over the goal line, a goal is not scored, and the ball was last touched by a member of the team defending the goal which sits on that goal line.