View Single Post
  #22 (permalink)  
Old Sat Jul 18, 2009, 05:52pm
Robert Goodman Robert Goodman is offline
Official Forum Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 2,916
Quote:
Originally Posted by chymechowder View Post
Granted, the forward batting of a backwards pass foul has got to be one of the rarest calls, but any idea on whether there were actual plays (in big games?) that prompted the rule change? Also, when did it change?
I don't remember when in Fed, but in NCAA there was an incident. Some time in the 1960s or earlier (it might even have been back when they went from 13 rules to 10) NCAA had recodified a section and left a loophole by forbidding only the gain of distance by batting a ball forward and out of bounds. The loophole languished until some time in the 1970s when a college varsity coach noticed it as explained in Illustrated Football Rules and put in a play where the ostensible place kick holder tossed the ball up like a volleyball serve for the kicker to slap forward, and then their whole team pounced on the ball in the end zone. Interestingly, coaches immediately realized this not to be in the spirit of the game, and even though a TD was ruled, it was never repeated by that or any other team, and the rules were amended the next season to the current provision. Indeed, it looks as if the play was done just to call the att'n of the rules committee to the loophole.

Robert in the Bronx
Reply With Quote