yes!
Handle the ball in the goal area only
yes
Field hockeyIf the ball becomes lodged in the goalkeeper's pads, a penalty corner is normally awarded. However, like all offences, if no player is attempting to play the ball and the keeper can remove it, play should be allowed to continue. Ice hockeyIf the puck becomes lodged in a goalkeeper's pads, the whistle is blown and play is ended. A faceoff is then done in the nearest faceoff circle.
Yes, this is allowed. However it is quite rare.
it is not a handball as long as the ball is inside the penalty box.
The purpose of the penalty arc is to ensure that, when a player takes a penalty kick, his teammates and opponents stay ten yards away from him at all times. While the goalkeeper has the ball in his possession, no player is allowed within the penalty arc until the keeper releases the ball.
No. When determining whether a goalkeeper may touch a ball with his hands, only the position of the ball matters. If the ball had not crossed (or touched the plane above) the boundary of the goalkeeper's own penalty area, it would be considered deliberate handling, The restart would be a direct free kick at the location of the handling. The goalkeeper might be cautioned if the act prevented the development of a promising goal scoring opportunity in the opinion of the referee. The goalkeeper might be sent off if the ball would have entered the net if not for the handling (and without being touched again by any player) in the referee's opinion.
No. It doesn't matter where the goalkeeper is.The ballmust be in the penalty area (on the line is inside) for the keeper to touch it.
Any player is allowed to take a throw-in. Also the goalkeeper can throw the ball after legally picking it up during the course of play.
Goalie is the abbreviated word for goalkeeper. The goalkeeper is the player in any team sport, requiring the scoring of goals, who is allowed to handle the ball or puck when trying to stop the scoring of goals.
absolutely no goal. only the position of ball dete rmines the goal.
A goalkeeper is considered to be in control of the ball when... ...the ball is between the hands or between the hand and any surface (e.g. ground, own body) ...holding the ball in the outstretched open hand ...bouncing it on the ground or throwing it in the air A goalkeeper cannot be challenged for the ball even when in the process of throwing or punting it.