yes......there must be space between the goaline and the puck.
No. The puck has to fully cross the goal line, and must have entered the goal legally.
Yes, the goal light in ice hockey is electronically sensitive to the puck. When the puck fully crosses the goal line, sensors inside the goal posts or crossbar detect the puck's presence and trigger the goal light to signal a score.
Hit the puck across the goal line and into the back of the net.
The hockey puck was invented so hockey players had something to shoot into the goal.
If there is conclusive video evidence that the puck completely crossed the goal line, then yes, it is a goal regardless of whether or not the puck was in a glove at the time or not.
Icing is when a team shoots the puck from it's defensive zone to behind the goal line in the other team's defensive zone and one of the other team's skater's touches the puck before one of the team that shot the puck's does. Therefore, an icing warning is when the puck goes beyond the goal line but an opposing player has not yet touched the puck. Sources- I play hockey! :)
well it's the same thing if the puck was in a goalie's glove and his glove went over the line. It's a goal.
try to shoot the puck in the net!
no you can not kick the puck
Put the puck in the goal
A puck is call a puck in Ice-Hockey it is a small rubber disc, where the goal is to get that disc into the back of your opponent's net more than they do to you.
In ice hockey, icing is called when the puck is shot into the team's offensive zone and crosses both the center line and goal line (but the puck does not enter the net) without toughing a player or their stick. This results in a face-off in the team's defensive zone.