If the ball is loose and live, a player can't deliberately kick it or bat it.
Yes, that is a fumble.
If a punter misses a kick it is a live ball. If the kicking team recovers, they turn the ball over on downs. (Assuming they are unable to recover the ball and covet.) If the defending team recovers it plays out the same way as a traditional fumble would.
fumble
the way it affects it is because a big foot takes up the length of the ball so that you can kick it farther, for instance, a kid who has a small foot, can not kick the ball as far it is not taking up all the space on the ball
Kick the ball into the net, or pass the ball to a teammate so they can kick the ball into the net. The team that kicks the ball into the net the most times during the game wins.
If the 'kick' is intentional, it is an illegal kick penalty. If it is unintentional, it is a fumble.
Yes, that is a fumble.
If the 'kick' is intentional, it is an illegal kick penalty. If it is unintentional, it is a fumble.
If a punter misses a kick it is a live ball. If the kicking team recovers, they turn the ball over on downs. (Assuming they are unable to recover the ball and covet.) If the defending team recovers it plays out the same way as a traditional fumble would.
an interception is when you steal the ball but a fumble is when you drop it
The nose guard cannot slap at the ball to cause a fumble.
No, an initial force resulting from a fumble would typically be attributed to the player or action that caused the fumble in the first place, not the subsequent carry, kick, snap, or muff. The force causing the fumble is considered to be the initial force in this context.
Yes the punt receiver can recover a muffed kick (fumbled kick) after signalling for a fair catch. He just can not run with the ball once it is picked up.
A fumble is when the ball comes out of the players posession before he/she is down. If the fumble is recovered by the opposing team, it is considered a turnover and the posession of the ball changes.
No, a fumble cannot be advanced by the team that did not originally possess the ball.
No, in the NFL, a fumble cannot be advanced by the offense. If the offense recovers their own fumble, the ball is dead at the spot of the recovery. If the defense recovers the fumble, they can advance it.
If the player catching the ball has control of it and then he drops it it is a fumble, if they never caught it but they just touched it it is an incomplete pass