A free kick is given after an offence. It is taken from where the offence occurred and may be aimed directly at the goal.
A free kick in which a goal may be scored by the player taking the free kick.
a kick awarded to a player for a serious foul committed by the opposition; the player kicks a stationary ball with no opposing players within 10 yards of him; a goal can be scored directly from this kick without the ball touching another player.
awarded as the result of a foul, such as kicking, tripping, holding or pushing; the kick is taken from the point of the infraction and the designated player taking the kick may score directly without another player having to touch the ball.
A free-kick resulting from a foul that can be shot into the goal without having to be touched by another player.
A kick awarded to a player after being fouled by the opposition; the player kicks a stationary ball while opposing players are forced to stand 10 feet away from him; a goal can be scored directly from this kick without the ball touching another player.
A kick awarded to a player by the referee after a serious foul is committed by the opposition. The ball is set at the spot of the foul, and opposing players cannot stand within 10 yards of the ball. A goal can be scored without the ball touching any of the teammates of the player taking the direct free kick.
A method of restarting play, where the player taking the kick may shoot the ball directly into the net. Indicated by the referee when he points in the direction of the kick. Law 13
A direct free kick is a method of restarting play in a game of association football (soccer) following a foul. Unlike an indirect free kick, a goal may be scored directly against the opposing side without the ball having first touched another player.