A bowling lane is 60 feet long from the foul line to the center of the headpin. Each pin is 12 inches apart center to center. And the approach (the part you walk on) is 15 feet long.
Your description is not really enough to determine. There are two possibilities. If an attacker applied enough force to physically move the goal keeper out of the space he occupied, then a foul would be called and a direct free kick awarded to the defense. If the referee determined that no foul occurred (there is physical contact that is allowable) then a goal would be awarded to the attacking team. It is important to note that the whole of the ball must completely pass the whole of the goal line. If the goal keeper can stick their arms out and keep even part of the ball directly over any part of the goal line, then it is not a goal.
The foul line is considered part of fair territory. It would be a fair ball.
the foul line is the line that line that seperates the actual lane that the ball slides on and the part that you walk on. if you cross that line then you get points taken off of your score.
If you cross the foul line, it will constitute a foul. The most common is your foot sliding past the approach, crossing the line and touching the lane. Another common reason is becoming unbalanced after releasing the ball to where you stumble and a part of your body touches the line or beyond the foul line.
well you do this and that and that constituts a foul in Bowling stepping over the foul line at the lane before you let go
The foul line is the term used for the line that a bowler can not cross when delivering the ball. Touching the lane with any part of the body past the line is called a foul.
It's called the foul line.In sanctioned (official) competition, if any part of the body crosses that line, the bowler has committed a foul and gets zero for the ball; if it was their first ball of the frame, the pins are reset to a full rack before they deliver their second ball.
Yes, a goal can be scored "from goal to goal" in a number of instances. If a ball is in play and a goalkeeper kicks a ball from his hands (or even throws it) and it goes into the opponent's goal, it is ruled a goal. If a goalkeeper or other player takes a goal kick to restart play, this can result in a goal if it goes into the opponent's goal. (A goal kick is a type of direct free kick.) Any kick taken by any player while a ball is in play can score a goal if it travels the length of the field and goes in the goal. It may be very difficult to kick a ball that is actually on the goal line and kick it down the full length of the field and into the opponent's goal, but it is possible. Further, the Laws of the Game allow a goal to be scored in the instances cited providing no foul has occurred.
This area is called the approach. It is 15 feel from the foul line back with an allowance of 1/4 inch. This is where the bowler starts their "approach" to release the bowling ball.
Any part of the ball must cross the goal line. Once any part of the ball has "broken the plane" it is a touchdown. The "whole" ball does not need to cross the line. If the ball is touching the white line, but no part of it passes the white line it is NOT a touchdown.
When the ball completely crosses the goal line using and body part other than hands/arms.