Yes, it's the back pass rule.a free kick is given inside the box if the goalkeeper handles a pass from his teammates.it is not a penalty, and the defensive side can set up a wall like a normal free kick outside the box.
Well sometimes the keeper picks the ball out of the net and lumps it up the pitch. Or get the ball back to the half way line.
Kicking back
It used to be left on the field during the play and picked up afterwards by anyone from a ball boy to a coaching assistant to the back judge. In todays games, one of the ref's not involved in looking for kick off penalties picks it up and tosses it off the field of play as soon as all players have cleared the area.
Just relaxing.
A goal keeper may not touch with his hands a ball directly thrown-in to them by a team-mate. If they do, then an indirect free kick is awarded at the location it was touched.
This rule was introduced in 1992 due to the 1990 World Cup being extremely boring. The defence would waste time kicking the ball back and forth with the keeper and if a striker came near the keeper would just pick it up.
If a defender passes the ball with his feet to the goal keeper, the goal keeper may not touch the ball with their hands.
You back away or you can't.
No you can't.
Keeper simply means that it's big enough to keep (and eat) as opposed to being thrown back in.
There hasn't been a lighthouse keeper at Currituck Island Lighthouse since it was automated back in 1939.
you'll always have his back no matter what