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Old Thu Sep 09, 2004, 11:17am
Texoma_LJ Texoma_LJ is offline
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Posts: 133
Back in the day, (dang I must be getting old), the association I belonged to schooled officials in this matter as a way to indicate that there was a dead ball, and it was quicker than getting a whistle blown. We were encouraged to use finger whistles even then. The thought process I believe was that by using a visual signal it didnt matter how loud a crowd was, where you were on the field, a coach knew what you were thinking immediately. If there was a pile up and forward progress was stopped and the ball came out. He knew by the hand going up that the ball was ruled dead.
I completely understand that a dead ball is a dead ball is a dead ball. This mechanic was used to let the coaches, fans, and pressbox know that, without the benefit of a whistle.
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