Quote:
Originally Posted by bisonlj
The only thing closer to a never is the umpire should never signal TD. There are two instances I can think of where they could though. The first is a fumble in the field of play and recovery by the offense in the end zone near the umpire. This has happened twice to me, and both times I told the BJ to signal since he was part of uncovering the pile. The second is a fumble on a kick return and the kicking team returns it for a TD on the U side.
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If there's a pile at the goal line, I'm almost certainly digging for the ball, and I'll let someone else give the touchdown signal once I find the ball and figure out who has possession.
I won't have a TD signal on a free-kick touchdown, since MN still uses to old 5-man free kick mechanics (I start at the 20 on L's sideline).
There's only one scenario where I would signal a TD as an umpire, although this is just a MN thing... MN puts the umpire in the offensive backfield on punt plays. If the ball is snapped from outside the 5 and inside the 15 or so, if there's a bad snap or a blocked kick. The way my crew has decided to handle those is to have the Umpire (me) cover the goal line and have the R cover the end line.
Inside the 5, the wing officials have the goal line on a punt, although I might still have a touchdown signal if R recovers the ball in my immediate vicinity. Hasn't happened to me yet though.
Back to the actual topic of this thread:
I'm never calling DPI because there's never a situation where I'm going to see the whole play AND be the only one who sees the whole play. I'm never calling OPI either... if one of my linemen is blocking downfield, I'll throw a flag for that; if H, L, or B wants to come up and tell me that blocking action should be OPI instead, so be it.
As for "discrete signals"... discrete signals don't stay discrete for long. Remember how the umpire used to do the "hand to the chest" signal to alert the wings to signal a touchdown on a goal-line pileup?