if a soccer ball is hit out of the field of play, it cannot be kept by fans in the stadium. the ball has to be returned to play, unlike Baseball.
The furthest a soccer ball has been kicked is 80 meters or 262.46 feet!!!
As of 2014, the fastest known recorded speed of a kicked soccer ball was 131 miles per hour (211 kilometers per hour), kicked by player Ronny Heberson. Since the speeds of kicked soccer balls are not often recorded, it is possible greater speeds have been achieved.
No official records exist for fastest kicks in competitive soccer. However, James Dart and Paolo Bandini compiled an unofficial list using data from the Sky Sports Replay 2000, and calculated that one shot flew at 114 miles per hour, kicked by David Hirst. The Guinness World Records lists a machine having kicked a ball at 139.8 miles per hour.
The force pulling objects back towards the Earth is gravity.
One of the earliest forms of soccer in which players kicked a ball around on a small field has been traced as far back to 1004 B.C. in Japan. The Munich Ethnological Museum in Germany has a Chinese text from approximately 50 B.C. that mentions games very similar to soccer that were played between teams from Japan and China. The Chinese kicked a leather ball ( hair-filled ) and it is known with certainty that a soccer game was played in 611 A.D. in the then Japanese capital, Kyoto.
The velocity of a football when it is hit can vary depending on factors such as the force of the impact and the angle at which it is hit. The initial velocity will be determined by the force exerted on the ball, and it will gradually decrease due to air resistance and other factors once it is in motion.
Because a soccer ball is made of "polished" pieces of fabric sown together and a bowling ball is made of Urethane, which is optimized ceramic material which has been partially hollowed and a core has been placed in the middle, I would say bowling ball.
Many different cultures have played a sport similar to the modern game of soccer but no one can really say with any certainty when or where soccer began but it is known that the earlier variations of what later became soccer were played almost 3000 years ago. One of the earliest forms of soccer in which players kicked a ball around on a small field has been traced as far back to 1004 B.C. in Japan. The Munich Ethnological Museum in Germany has a Chinese text from approximately 50 B.C. that mentions games very similar to soccer that were played between teams from Japan and China. The Chinese kicked a leather ball ( hair-filled ) and it is known with certainty that a soccer game was played in 611 A.D. in the then Japanese capital, Kyoto. hope it helps
When the ball is kicked out on the sideline (or Touchline), the procedure is the team who did not touch it last, gets to throw the ball in from the sidelines by drawing the ball behind their head with both hands and while both feet are planted on the ground and throw the ball back into play.
No, inertia does not stop a ball once it has been kicked. Inertia is the tendency of an object to remain in motion unless acted upon by an external force, so the ball will continue moving until another force (like friction or gravity) slows it down or stops it.
Clair writhe on the floor because she had been hit in the stomach very hard with a soccer ball that was kicked by the opposite playerAfter my car accident, there was nothing to do but writhe in pain as I waited for an ambulance.
A trick to taking out the wrinkles from a soccer ball that has not been inflated for a while is to let some air out of the ball. Then, air the ball up again while heating the ball with a hair dryer.