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Old Sat Oct 03, 2015, 06:58am
Robert Goodman Robert Goodman is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 2,893
Quote:
Originally Posted by Welpe View Post
Here is what constitutes a legal snap:

ART. 2 . . . The snap begins when the snapper first moves the ball legally other than in adjustment. In a snap, the movement must be a quick and continuous backward motion of the ball during which the ball immediately leaves the hand(s) of the snapper and touches a back or the ground before it touches an A lineman.

In picking up a ball and turning to hand it to the quarterback, the ball is moving backward continuously but it is not immediately leaving the snapper's hands.
It can leave the snapper's hands as immediately by that means as by any other method of exchange. What's the difference whether he hands it to the quarterback between his own legs or anywhere else? It's still a hands-to-hands exchange.
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