Quote:
Originally Posted by Texas Aggie
The rule reference in the first question is snapping the ball prior to the ready for play. Since it is a dead ball foul, anything short of Jesus' return means absolutely nothing. Everything is a do-over. He'll announce the foul, mark it off, then wind it up. They better be set offensively or they won't get the play off in time.
I had this happen in a game, except, instead of throwing a flag and enforcing a penalty, the Referee stupidly just wound the clock and let it run out. While that would have happened anyway, no one (including me -- HL on the other side of the field) knew it was a foul and everyone thought he was incorrectly winding the clock after an incomplete pass -- the snap prior to the RFP was a spike. He told me later, "well, I guess I COULD have thrown the flag."
I'm like, no, you SHOULD have thrown the flag. He and the umpire busted *** off the field without me and I had to run through the team that thought they got screwed to get to my car. Boy was I pissed (still am). To that, he said, "I didn't know you were parked over there." It was the only parking lot.
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I am still confused.
The reason I asked the question was because I was at the Boston College/Notre Dame game a few years ago when this very play happened.
Notre Dame had the ball in long field goal range after making a first down with no time outs left and one second on the clock. As the chains moved the field goal team rushed on and set up but just BEFORE the Referee was even ready to wind the clock the ball was snapped and the ensuing kick was a weak and futile attempt.
There was no penalty and the game was declared over.
I could not figure out how the game ended if the clock never started.
I could also see that this move by Notre Dame to incur a penalty to give it more time to prepare for the field goal, even with a yardage markoff, would be construed as taking advantage of the rules.
It obviously did not work, but I never saw any explanation of why the game ended with no penalty.
I am not compaining since I was rooting for Boston College. Just always curious as to rules.
By the way, I do baseball and softball, not football.