gravity
yes!.... it will affect a soccer ball when it falls because if the gravity affects you, it will affect a ball.
it would hit the ground if there was one to hit
No, Earth is bigger than a soccer ball. The analogy you may have seen is that if Earth were the size of a soccer ball, the Moon would be the size of a tennis ball, and would orbit the Earth at an average distance of 22 feet away.
To put it into the back of the net
It isn't called soccer ball because the soccer ball is the ball you use in soccer. See? I have actually heard people call it soccer and soccer ball.
That depends on the reference we take.....If we take the velocity upwards to be +ve than the velocity downwards will be negative and vice versa....
A soccer ball, according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basketball#Early_basketball. A soccer ball was used to play the first basketball game.
you kick it strait and comes back to you
The principle of conservation of momentum is not satisfied, since the sum of external forces is not equal to zero, if the ball falls the net force is equal to the weight, makes the ball Vary your speed and therefore their momentum.
It probably means a back heel, where the ball is behind you and you use your heel to hit the ball
when the keeper or goalie is in possession of the ball after being received from a back pass or saving a shot
A Scorpion kick.