ANSWERS: 5
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Every player on the field of play except the goalkeeper inside of his/her own penalty area may play the ball with any part of the body except the hands and arms. The top of the shoulder, head, chest, torso and legs are all allowed contact with the ball. The penalty for violation of this rule is a direct free kick from the spot of the infraction, except if that infraction is committed by the defending team inside its own penalty area, and then the result is a penalty kick.
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Hands and arms are the only body parts with which a regular player cannot touch the ball "intentionally" during gameplay. However, if the refree decides that the contact with the ball is unintentional, in other word, if it is the "ball" which contacts those parts of the player instead of the player touching the ball, he doesn't call a "handball".
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The only parts of the body that a field player cannot use during play is from his/her shoulder down, any other body part is allowed. There are some exceptions though, if the ball somehow does touch you somewhere from the shoulder, then two things can happen. first, the reffere could call a handball on you, and the other team would receive a indersct-kick(meaning that they can't score a goal without the ball touching another player). Or second the reffere could signal to play on. This happens when the referee feels that the handball wa unintentional, or he thinks that the handball would not change the outcome of the play(like your resulting in possestion of the ball). basically when playing soccer remember to keep anywhere from your shoulder down, AWAY from the ball.
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any part of your whole arm due to the new rules in 2007 fifa.
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imagine that your arms were severed at the shoulders ,you could now hit the ball with any body part you have
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