An indirect kick is awarded for various offenses, including when a player is offside, when a player plays the ball in a dangerous manner, or when a player impedes the progress of an opponent without making contact. Additionally, if a goalkeeper handles the ball improperly, such as taking too long to release it or handling a back-pass, an indirect kick is given. These infractions must occur outside of the penalty area for the indirect kick to be taken from the spot of the offense.
you cannot sore a goal from an indirect kick
It will be a indirect free kick.
An indirect free kick can be given on the center line if that is where the infraction occurred.
There is only one type of indirect free kick. There are 8 offenses that can result in an indirect free kick being given.
Indirect free kick.
The restart for an offside offense is an indirect free kick. Another player must touch it for a goal to be scored during an indirect free kick.
An indirect free kick that enters the kicker's own goal will result in a corner kick given to the other team. However, if the indirect free kick was taken from a spot within the kicker's own penalty area and did not exit the penalty area into the field of play, then the ball was never properly put in play and the kick is retaken.
An indirect free kick must be touched by another player before it goes into the net to count as a goal. A direct free kick does not.
A free kick. Depending on the category of the foul, it can be either a direct or an indirect free kick. The difference between the two is that a goal can be scored from a direct free kick (but only against the opponent) whereas a goal cannot be scored from an indirect free kick.
Where the offense occurred.
The referee should lower their arm after signaling an indirect free kick once the ball has been kicked and is in play.
The kick off is neither direct nor indirect, they are three different restarts. A goal may be scored from a kick off.