Yes, unless the ball was blocked.
A goal may be scored directly from a corner kick.
The kicker and the defending goal keeper.
You cannot score an own-goal directly from an indirect free kick or even a direct free kick. If the kick was taken from inside the kicker's penalty area and did not exit the penalty area before exiting the field, then the restart would be a rekick. If the kick was taken from outside kicker's penalty area or left the penalty area before exiting the field, then the restart would be a corner kick for the attacking team
A penalty kicker may be changed between retakes of a penalty kick. When taking kicks from the penalty mark to decide the winner, no kicker may kick again until everyone on their team has taken a turn.
to get a free kick you have to be tackled unfairly outside the penalty box. Wow... handling the ball is considered a tackle? I thought I got a free kick if the opponents handled the ball!
If the quarterback were to drop kick he would become a kicker and not a quarterback. The roughing the quarterback penalty would change to roughing the kicker.
No its fail as a kick. However, if the ball is placed by the kicker and when the run up starts the ball falls over the kicker cannot replace the ball the must play it from that point - It would normally be drop kicked over to complete the penalty kick.
The kicker is allowed to take a stutter step in the run-up to the ball. Not stop entirely, however. Once the ball is reached, the kick must proceed. No delay, no stutter, no stopping. The consequence is to wait and see if the goal is scored, issue a caution to the kicker, and: If a goal was scored, the penalty kick must be retaken. If a goal was not scored, the defense restarts with an Indirect Free Kick from the penalty mark.
An indirect free kick that enters the kicker's own goal will result in a corner kick given to the other team. However, if the indirect free kick was taken from a spot within the kicker's own penalty area and did not exit the penalty area into the field of play, then the ball was never properly put in play and the kick is retaken.
No, a kick must be hit from your normal running pattern. You can slow down, but not completely stop.
No. A different player may be elected to retake a penalty kick. An exception would be penalty kicks from the mark (after overtimes). No kicker may repeat until all his teammates have already kicked that round.
Yes you can, as long as the penalty kicker kicks it forward, even if only slightly forward, then another player may finish. Note: It would be equally likely that a defender could arrive first. The penalty kicker would not be allowed a second touch to prevent the interception.