No, the ref can decide whether to stop play and blow the whistle or he can just let the team kicking put the ball in play right away.
NO!
you cannot sore a goal from an indirect kick
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.
In essence yes. In soccer there is no countdown and generally a referee won't blow the final whistle until the ball crosses the halfway line or is played out of danger. So there is no way that you could be right in front of the goal (or on the attack) and have a referee blow the whistle just before you kick it in.
The ball has to be still, then you wait for the referee to blow the whistle, you should then aim for the ball to find a gap between the wall, and it should dip in the net.
There are only ever indiurect freekicks if a keeper picks up a pass back, and indirect freekicks means someone has to touch the ball before it goes into he net to score, direct means it can go straight in.
An indirect free kick can be given on the center line if that is where the infraction occurred.
It will be a indirect free kick.
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 answer is 2 - the person taking the free kick and one other.
An indirect free kick is given after a minor foul, such as impeding the progress of an opponent. When it is indirect, you are not allowed to score unless someone else touches it first. What often occurs close to the goal is that one of their team-mates will tap it first, then they will quickly shoot it. A direct free kick is another type and may directly score a goal without another player touching the ball. An indirect free kick that occurs in the penalty area will NOT result in a penalty kick as would a direct free kick that occurs in the penalty area.