An own goal
the team that scored the touchdown kicks the ball off to the other team
A soccer player kicks a ball into the opposing team's goal. A goalkeeper will try to stop this from happening
it depends how hard he kicks it.
If he kicks it into the opponent's goal, then a goal is awarded and a kick-off is given to the opposing team. If he kicks it into his own goal, then the kick was backwards and must be retaken. In some youth leagues (under 8) there are no direct kicks, so if the ball were untouched into the goal, the kick would be retaken. If a defender touched it on the way to the net, the goal would count. This is similar to a throw-in, which cannot score a goal directly.
A player kicks it, chests it, passes it, or throws it (from a throw in), a goalkeeper kicks it, catches it and throws it.
In American and Canadian football, a field goal is scored by kicking a ball pinned to the ground by the finger of another player between the two upright posts of the goal. When scored, it counts as three points for the side who kicks it.
You cannot score an own-goal on a direct free kick. The restart would be a corner kick for the opponents.
Takya is a traditional Korean board game similar to chess. It is played on a 9x10 board with each player having 22 pieces - generals, elephants, chariots, cannons, horses, guards, and soldiers. The objective is to capture the opponent’s general without being put in checkmate.
A clearance
Yes, of course.
No, a goal cannot be scored directly from a throw in. If the ball was thrown into your own goal, it would be a corner to the opposing team. If the ball was thrown into the opposing teams goal, the restart would be a goal kick.
Yes, a goal may be scored directly from a kick-off without first touching any other player. However, you cannot score against yourself in this manner (if somehow you kicked the ball forward and the wind blew it back into your own goal, your opponents would get a corner kick).