Quote:
Originally Posted by Rich
Sorry. Misread the original play.
No new series. RFP.
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Bringing up dead discussions, but I'm doing some preseason prep by reading through forum plays and questions. Just because there wasn't a new series awarded doesn't automatically mean we are on the RFP.
The clock status in this play, as on any other play, depends on how the down ended. If anything in 3-4-3 happened to cause the down to end, we're on the snap. For example in this play, if the returner goes out of bounds, there's a touchback, a fair catch is made, etc., it's on the snap. The only way we start on the RFP is if the returner is tackled inbounds, the ball becomes dead inbounds, or something else covered in 3-4-2.
3-4-3 (major clock stopper) always supersedes 3-4-2 (minor clock stopper), which means if you have a live-ball foul (minor clock stopper) as well as a ball out of bounds (major clock stopper), the ball out of bounds is what "stops the clock," not the foul. In the case play 3.4.2 Situation D mentioned above, it's only half correct. It doesn't specify whether or not the returner is tackled inbounds or out of bounds, and the rules book always supersedes the case book. The case play
should say the returner is tackled inbounds in order for that ruling to be correct.
Timing situations can get hairy, but I always go through 3-4-3-a to j and if any of those things happened, you start on the snap. Otherwise, RFP. Obviously you can't do this in-game, but it can commit to memory pretty quickly.