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What if the Defense is Verbal During Cadence...???
I am looking for other officials opinions on this scenario...
#1. All A players are in set positon, but quarterback is not under center or in his cadence. Linebacker B1 yells "Shift" and the defensive line shifts and then the offensive line false starts. The goal and purpose of the verbal defensive call is to get the defense into a goal-line type defensive package at the last possible moment before the snap. #2. Same scenario, but the quarterback is under center in his cadence? What are your rulings for #1 & for #2? Last edited by ddoom; Tue Oct 03, 2006 at 10:07am. Reason: edit title... |
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The defense has the right to call out signals and plays. This is completely legal and I would have nothing. The offense needs to pay attention to their QB and not what the defense is calling.
Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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OK...I'm good with all of your explanations and I do agree, but can someone please give me an example of a violation that relates to Rule 9.5.1D in NF? I would like to look at it from that perspective to ease my mind.
Thanks in Advance! |
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"Many baseball fans look upon an umpire as a sort of necessary evil to the luxury of baseball, like the odor that follows an automobile." - Hall of Fame Pitcher Christy Mathewson |
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Bob M. |
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We had a linebacker in a JV game bark at the offense while trying to not move. It was obvious to us that he was trying to get the offense to jump. Needless to say we nailed him quickly.
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I heard about this type of play with a Junior High game. defense (not knowingly) yells shift to get into a new formation, causes the offensive line to jump. No foul. Defense again yells shift, offensive line jumps... it was clear to the official working that now the defense has leanred by doing this they are getting a false start on the offense, officials say no more, next time its a foul. |
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I agree with cougar729 in that the timing and "intent" of what the defense is doing is more important that the specific words. When it becomes obvious that the timing of B's signals is intended to get A to respond (usually only after A has called set), then it should be flagged if A responds.
We had this two weeks ago when one of the teams that uses what I would call a "timed silent count" (1-3 seconds) followed by a single "go" (so they were snapping on the 1st sound after the set following a variable delay) got called for false start in the 2nd half. When 2 plays later it happened again (B barking a color after A's set call) we realized that B had apparently made a "2nd half" adjustment and was barking out a signal (a color) during the silent part of the count. While we did not flag the 2nd incident (neither team fouled) we warned B that using that tactic would draw a flag the next time that it resulted in A false starting. No complaint from the B coach, just a sly smile.
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"It's easy to get the players, Getting 'em to play together, that's the hard part." - Casey Stengel |
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I tend to agree with RoyGardner in that it depends on the officials judgement of the intent. I have been around football for years, both as a player (high school and college) and an official (20 years), and you know when coaches are acting with that "sly smile". Help me out if others have an opinion. Thanks again, in advance! |
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