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High school game, K punts the ball, (legal scrimmage kick) a) R muffs the kick, b)R returns punt, or c) R returns punt and there is a penalty during the return by R, in all cases R fumbles and K revcovers. You are awarding a new series to K, do you start the clock on the snap?? I looks like it under 3-4-3, but I am having a small debate over it with another official. I wish there was case play for this.
Thanks for all you help and input!
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Ron |
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Start the clock on the snap. Rule 3-4-3c: either team is awarded a new series following a legal kick.
Here is another one. B intercepts A's pass, during the return, B fumbles, A recovers and is downed inbounds. Does the clock start on the ready or the snap? |
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on the snap, because technically B earned a new series, then a got it back...that is my justification anyway, after a change of possesion, always start on the snap...or at least that is MHO
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The clock starts on the snap when B is awarded a new series, but in this case, B is never awarded a series because they fumbled it away... |
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I don't disagree with what you are saying piggskin, as a matter of fact your position is pretty defensible..but consider this..Why does the clock start on the snap when A recovers a punt that was touched first by B...Here is my logic to it, there has been a change of possesion, when A kicked it they gave up possesion then got it back via a muff or fumble that they recovered....if you agree with that logic then the fumbled interception is not that much different?? any thoughts...anyone??
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If the play is designed to fool someone, make sure you aren't the fool. |
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PSU, yep totally out there but in this discussion, very relevant....on the interception, fumble, recovery with A ending up with the ball, when do you start the clock, RFP or snap...I am beginning to have doubts LOL..I was always taught, change of possesion, start on the snap, and we definitely have a COP...
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New Two Minute Drill
PSU: I think you've come up with a new way of running the two minute drill... Don't say it too loud or coach will try to implement it...
cmathews: I think it's important to differentiate between the layman's description and the rulebook's description... That is: "Clock stops when there is a turnover" (Layman's words) vs. "Clock stops when B is awarded a new series" (Rulebook's words, somewhat paraphrased) Punts are different because the book (3-4-3c) explicitly handles legal kicks differently... |
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Re: New Two Minute Drill
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If the play is designed to fool someone, make sure you aren't the fool. |
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This play occured in a game that I was R in a few years ago. 3 of my crew thought I was wrong to start the clock on the ready and one thought I was correct but was not sure. We had a Supervisor (Scout) at the game and he thought I was correct. |
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I agree on this, start the clock on the ready after the interception followed by the fumble. It seems like a play that is likely to happen ever once in awhile, I can't NFHS hasn't made a note in the rule on this or a the very least a casebook play.
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Ron |
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I would say that they all start on the snap as the action that ended the previous play also stopped the clock. |
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