Quote:
Originally Posted by JugglingReferee
Yes. The rule now is that what it is is what it is. No lag time. Does Fed football even address the issue? If not, I take it to mean that there is no human reaction time. If the whistle goes at 0.8, then there is 0.8 left.
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First of all, FED football doesn't recognize tenths of seconds. It's either 1 second or it's zero.
As for FED addressing timing issues, I found the following:
The 2007 edition of High School Football Rules Illustrated states, "Obvious errors in timing may be corrected by the referee if the discovery of the error is made prior to the second live ball following the error, unless the period has official ended.
No other adjustments in timing is authorized."
The 2006 edition of High School Football Rules by Topic states adds as rationale, "The correction procedure applies to obvious errors.
The coverage does not authorize attempting to correct trivial or incidental lag starting or stopping the clock. The error must be in an acknowledged discrepancy in the time and does include a slight lag due to human reaction. Correctable errors will have resulted for a failure to apply the provision of the timing rule on the part of the official or failure of the clock operator to follow the direction of the field official, or from a mechanic (sic) failure of the clock. The error to be corrected must not involve judgment. In a situation in which the clock was not stopped after the score of during the administration of a penalty, the referee is permitted to put time back on the clock. If there had been a failure to start the clock with the snap following an incomplete forward pass, or with the legal touching of the free kick following a touchdown, the referee would be permitted to compensate by taking time off the clock."