Quote:
Originally Posted by BadNewsRef
To me it is not important how they got there. I just don't like the rule as the FED interprets it.
What gets called if B1 flops backwards as A1 goes airborne and then A1 lands on some part of B1's body and A1 trips and falls? I know from the time I've been officiating I've been told to call B1 with a block.
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What you've been told doesn't agree with the rules.
Why should it be a block? If B1 had stayed upright, it would been an obvious and significant charge if the play was such that B1 was able to fall backwards and still get landed on. B1's movement isn't changing that. I can accept not calling the charge when B1 yields the position, but to flip to a block just isn't right.
But that really isn't the case we're talking about.
What we're really talking about is B1 falling across A1's path, not being already in it with LGP and falling back.