The goal kick will need to be retaken.
A free kick that is not shot from directly in front of the goal.
Goal kick for the opposing team (the one who didn't shoot)
Although this technically could be called deliberate handling, resulting in a direct free kick at the point of the infraction, in reality a referee will consider this trifling and will let it go with a verbal warning to the goalkeeper. The more the behavior persists, the more likely a handling call will occur.
Yes. The referee will award the goal.If the referee believes it was done deliberately the defender would be cautioned for unsporting behavior. A send off would not be warranted in this case because no goal-scoring opportunity was denied.
If the penalty was successful, then no goal is awarded and the kick is retaken. If the penalty was not successful, then no goal is awarded and an indirect free kick is awarded to the defense. They will not get a 2nd shot at the goal because their own player infringed.
A shot on goal is determined when the puck hits the goalie anywhere or it goes in. You think "if there was no goalie there would the puck have gone in?" if you answered YES! then the shot was a shot on goal
A goalkeeper will try to place his shot wherever his team is most dominant in the air, or according to his captain or manager's tactical instructions.
well, anyone in a team of players in AFL can kick a goal. as long as they have the ball and can kick it through the large goal posts, then they can kick a goal. but, position-wise, generally, the goal kickers are the players that play the positions 'full-forward' and 'half-forward' and they simply need to get the ball and somehow kick it through the goals, whether it be from a mark and a set shot or a running kick through. sometimes midfielders will run up and kick goals and occaisionally even a defender will run through the middle, receive the ball and have a go. hope that helps!
Yes, because it is in-direct and so if it was shot and the ball went into the goal with no one touching it, the goal would not count.
most of the time when a goal keeper takes the penalty shot but sometimes when the goal keeper of the other team is so much above his field or area the goal keeper may kick the ball from goal to the other goal.
It is a blocked shot, not a shot on goal. To be counted as a shot on goal it has to be stopped by the goalie or a goal.
Yes. There is no scoring difference between a penalty shot during regulation time vs. a goal scored during active play.