During a match, no. If the player misses and the ball remains in play, play continues. If however it is a penalty shoot out and the penalty is missed then yes, the ball is dead.
it is a skill in football if you play football you have dead-ball skill.and if you do a head attack also do a spring attack in a football match.a spring attack is when you roll and you kick it high.
They can decline the penalty, yes... but there would be no reason to decline it, because in high school this is a dead ball foul and the play is immediately blown dead.
you get a penalty and have to redo the touchdown. The above answer is wrong. Excessive celebration is a dead-ball personal foul. Because a dead-ball foul occurs after the play is over, the touchdown still stands. The 15-yard penalty is assessed on the ensuing kickoff.
Once you have taken the penalty and hit the new ball, you may not hit the old ball again. Play on with the penalty and the new ball.
theres no penalty, you just look stupid
YES, THEY JUST REPLAY THE DOWN
The live ball penalty is applied first, then the dead ball fouls is applied after the live ball foul. For example, a holding call on the offense would result in a replay of the down with a 10-yard penalty. If that occured on 2nd-and-five, it would become 2nd-and-15. Then, the defensive personal foul would be applied; a 15-yard penalty with an automatic first down. If the original line of scrimmage was the offene's own 40-yard-line, the next play would be 1st-and-10 from the offene's 45.
No, because an illegal shift doesn't happen until the ball is snapped. If every player is shifting, it is legal as long as they pause 2 seconds for high school, 1 second for NCAA/NFL before the snap. So it is a live ball penalty.
dead ball.
No, there is no penalty. What you do is replace the ball as close as possible to where it was before it was moved. If the animal runs away with the ball and you cannot get it you simply use another ball, but you must declare this to your playing partners.
2 shot penalty