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Old Sun Feb 24, 2019, 01:49pm
ajmc ajmc is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert Goodman View Post
As the ball is snapped, A1, starting on the line, blocks B1 at or below the knees. B1 is deflected slightly from his charge, but continues on his feet. A2, starting immediately behind A1, seeing B1 coming, stands his ground and uses palms-forward technique, taking a short step sideways to more squarely get into B1's path, to contact him above the waist.

Is this a high-low combination block of the type either Fed or NCAA disallows?

Does it make a difference if you know A2 is carrying out an assignment by blocking B1 in that manner?
Seems like (considering the way you've worded your question), these would be two separate and independent blocks, so high-low is not a relevant factor, or appropriate consideration.

Can't tell what A2 is thinking, but what his plan, or intention might be, it's his action we're supposed to be observing.
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