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Old Mon Sep 08, 2008, 02:30pm
Jim D Jim D is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Robert Goodman
What if under the same circumstance he makes a shoulder block with hands kept close to his body? For instance, running parallel near the sideline, the defender with inside position shoulders the A player so he steps out of bounds. Or near the end line, he shoulder blocks him over it.

I know that the old rule in all the codes specifically referred to illegal use of hands, and specifically allowed a block under the old rules (liberalized everywhere else) where the hands had to be kept close to the body, palms inward. And then some time in the 1980s or maybe the early '90s, the NFL, without much fanfare, changed their rule to "illegal use of the hands, arms, or body". They didn't highlight that last bit to the fans because apparently it was thought that a clean body block by defenders never occurred anyway (BBW had already been banned vs. potential receivers). I assume from various remarks that NCAA eventually followed suit; Fed too?

Robert
Robert, It's still illegal use of the hands even if he doesn't use his hands. He can't contact the receiver if the receiver is no longer a potential blocker.

9-2-3-d. A defensive player shall not contact an eligible receiver who is no longer a potential blocker. The penalty is illegal use of the hands or arms.
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