Quote:
Originally Posted by rngrck
I agree with you. How many times are you going to flag A for blocking down field? IF it happens away from the play, never. After a catch, never, while the ball is in the air, maybe but it better be in the vicinity.
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In my mind, it is defintely OPI if the block were to free up the player to whom the pass is eventually thrown. As for after the catch, by definition, it is impossible to have OPI here. An argument can be made for not calling OPI when the pass is in the air and the pass is thrown somewhere else. There are not any catchability requirements for DPI, why then should this matter for the offense? In addition, the "vicinity" rule is only in effect for contact by B. Now it is true that we need some common sense about it, but it is impossible to say that contact was away from the play before the pass was even thrown.