It would be very easy (and completely justified) for the referee to caution a player or players for dangerous play if they intentionally (or even unintentionally) attempted to do this. Certainly it is not specifically prohibited according to the Laws of the Game, but dangerous play is prohibited. And it may be unsporting as well as a case could certainly be made for that.
Tosh-0 - 2009 Football Player Tackles His Teammate 2-4 was released on: USA: 3 February 2010
The ball is thrown by a player on one team to a teammate- but is caught by a member of the other team.
you need to be stronge alethics strong not scared of some1 be a good teammate...etc
a football player who whips in balls from the side
A Forward Pass is passing the football to a teammate in front of you. A Lateral Pass is the player carrying the ball passing the football on side or behind him/her.
Roy Riegels, 1929 Rose Bowl
yes
yes, it is a penalty that occurs on a point after touchdown attempt when a player uses another player( teammate) in an attempt to propel himself higher to block the kick.
An assist occurs when a player passes the ball to a teammate and the teammate scores.
Chris Tarrant is a retired Australian football player. In 2006, he was fined $5,000 for breaking the player's code of conduct when he and a teammate got into a fight in a nightclub.
yes, as long as the ball does not touch the ground, it is live. there have been numerous plays where a ball deflects into a reception or an interception. however, in collegiate football (at least) you cannot intentionally kick a ball to a teammate. this was a controversial ending to a NEBRASKA - MISSOURI game in 1997 in which a player kicked a ball to his teammate as time expired, but the refs did not see it. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flea_Kicker)
It's "holding", not "holing". A player is not permitted to grab onto a player who does not have the football, nor is he allowed to hold him down if he's on the ground.