NO!
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.
When the ball goes out of play over the backline and was last touched by a defender, the attacking team receives a 'corner kick', where the ball is placed within a yard of the corner post and then taken as a free kick. 'Corner' is short for 'corner kick'.
A corner kick is awarded when the ball completely exits the field across the goal line and was last touched by a defender.
The referee blows the whistle when the time is over. The referee decides when time is over. This can be before a corner kick or even once a corner kick is in the air. Generally if a team is hurrying to get the corner off,
yes, since the goal keeper is the defender, and he/she touched it last, it is a corner.
Corner
According to the international Laws of the Game administered by FIFA, a whistle is not needed to restart from a "free kick, goal kick, corner kick, throw in." Furthermore, a whistle is required for the following:• start play (1st, 2nd half), after a goal• stop play:- for a free kick or penalty kick- if the match is suspended or abandoned- when a period of play has ended due to the expiration of time• restart play for:- free kicks when the appropriate distance is required- penalty kicks• restart play after it has been stopped due to:- the issue of a yellow or red card for misconduct- injury- substitution.This information is obtained from The Laws of the Game2010, p. 76.Footnotes and Further Review:Law 5 - The RefereeLaw 12 - Fouls and MisconductLaw 13 - Free Kicks.
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.
You cannot be offside from a corner kick
The whistle is mostly used by the referee to signal players to stop or start play. That can be for a number of reasons. It can be used to award free kicks, corners, and penalties. It is blown to tell players to begin play at the kickoff and to end play, with two whistles at half time, and three distinct whistles at the end of the match. If players get aggressive referees can blow the whistle in short sharp bursts to get players to 'break it up'. After a free kick or corner is awarded the whistle is blown again, to tell the kicker he is allowed to begin the set play.
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.
you place the ball in the little quarter circle down in the corner and typically you want someone who can lift the ball and curl it towards the far post to take the kick, you want it placed just out of the goalie's reach, beautiful headers can be had if a corner is taken properly.