Quote:
Originally Posted by goldsmi
The FED makes a distinction between 'spotting the ball' and RFP as evidenced in these unrelated Casebook cites:
*7.5.2 SITUATION G: In the last few seconds of a half, A1 completes a pass to
A2 at B’s 20-yard line. The ball is properly spotted and the referee marks it ready
for play and signals the clock to start. In the rush and confusion to stop the clock,
A’s snapper and quarterback A1 are the only A players in legal position when the
ball is snapped and legally “spiked” by A1. A foul for illegal formation occurs at
the snap.
10.1.1 SITUATION A: Where is the ball spotted following penalty acceptance
when it is snapped from the right-side hash mark and the run ends in the left-side
zone and the foul is: (a) illegal motion by A1; or (b) holding by A1 in the middle
of the field behind the end of the run; or (c) grasping the face mask/helmet opening
by B1 in making the tackle? RULING: In (a), it is spotted at the right-side hash
mark. In (b), it is spotted in the middle of the field since the enforcement spot was
the spot of the foul. In (c), it is spotted at the left hash mark.
It is reasonable to interpret that spotting the ball takes place prior to the RFP and is a separate activity.
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Obviously it
must take place before the RFP and is a separate activity, but the cases given above don't speak to the case being discussed here.
What makes anyone believe that whoever wrote "spotted" in Casebook reference 4.3.6 actually meant that, rather than its meaning "readied"?
"Do you want the ball here?" [Puts ball on ground.]
"No, there."
"Too late, it's spotted."