Your description is not really enough to determine. There are two possibilities.
If an attacker applied enough force to physically move the goal keeper out of the space he occupied, then a foul would be called and a direct free kick awarded to the defense. If the referee determined that no foul occurred (there is physical contact that is allowable) then a goal would be awarded to the attacking team.
It is important to note that the whole of the ball must completely pass the whole of the goal line. If the goal keeper can stick their arms out and keep even part of the ball directly over any part of the goal line, then it is not a goal.
Yes. But if the ball also goes into the goal it will be a goal for the opposing team.
The main thing is, was the ball going in anyway? If the ball was going in and the goalkeeper gets a hand to it, it is not deemed to be an own goal. Sometimes the keeper will get a hand to it, but not enough to stop it going in, this is not an own goal. If however the ball was going a metre wide and the goalkeeper fumbles it into the net, that is an own goal.
A goal keeper cannot deliberately handle the ball outside of his own penalty area. If they do, then a direct free kick is awarded to the opponents.
you touch the ball with your hand or hit the ball with your hand when your not a goalie. The goalie can only pick up the ball or make contact with the ball inside of the 18 metre crease. (The bigger crease).
if you are a golie, you can stop the ball anyway you want, as long as it isn't passed to you by a team mate, in that case you must play the ball with your feet but if the ball is shot then yes you may use your hand fist arm leg foot or anything on your body to stop the ball, but if it goes past the line between the goal post it is concidered a goal.
A goalkeeper may not handle a ball that has been deliberately kicked to him from a teammate. If the goalkeeper does handle the ball after is was deliberately kicked to him from a teammate, the opposing team is awarded an indirect free kick from the place where the ball was at the moment it was touched (or on the goal area line parallel to the goal line nearest to the spot of the ball if it is within the goal area).
No using your hand(unless your the goalie) No pushing with your hands, but you can shoulder people. you have to stay in bounds(the white lines) and if your team kicks it out then the other team gets the throw-in You can't pass the ball back to your goalie and have her/him pick it up, but the goalie can kick it you can only slidetackle if your A: going for the ball and B:your toes are pointed. You can't be offsides You cant be offsides in a through-in Hands behind your head and feet STAY on the ground during a throw-in The goalie CAN come out of the box but they cant pick up the ball If the ball is kicked inside the goal box and goes out of bounds its a goal kick, if the ball is kicked out of bounds but OUTSIDE of the goal box it is a corner kick. During a penalty kick/free kick you must stay 10-15 yards away from the ball during a kick off the ball must be kicked in front of the line (this isnt all of the rules)
A delibrate hand ball leads to a penalty.
the answer is yes but very very unprovable for a very odd series of events would have to be produced , first you'd have to have a goalie with very strong arm just to get it to the opposite goal then from there nobody has to touch it and have the other goalie so distracted that the ball passes very slowly by him, another scenario is that a goalie score a goal on his own net which by the way believe or not has actually happen. so in conclusion the answer is yes but unlikely.
the goalie and any player who has the ball in hand.
Hand of God goal
To make it as easy as possible for the shooter. A penalty kick is the closest thing to a free goal the referee can award. Plus, if the goalie didn't have to stand on his line, another arbitrary line would have to be drawn up to limit his movement.On a side note, the goalie can come off his line after the shooter's foot makes contact with the ball, but with professional soccer players' power, this is hardly an advantage.