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Two play situations
[Already posted on the Fed discussion forum, so some of you may have seen these already.]
These two plays are from this year's NFL pre-season test. Evaluate them for Fed and NCAA rules (specify which you're using). 1. PLAY: A 3/4 B44. QB takes snap, and at the B45, turns and throws a quick pass which Back A2 catches at the B44. A2 runs to the B36 where he throws a pass to End A4 at the B28 and A4 runs for a TD. After scoring A2 taunts B2. 2. PLAY: A 3/10 A10 Back A2 takes a hand off from QB A1 at the A5 and runs to the A26 where, just before he is tackled there, tosses the ball forward to Guard A6 who tries to catch the ball at the A28 but muffs it into the air. B1 catches the ball at the A30 and runs to the A 1/2 where he fumbles the ball over the endline. Interesting twist to Play #1...what if it was 4th down?
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Bob M. |
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NCAA:
Unless I'm not seeing everything. 1. Result will be A 4th and 16 at A-44. Clock will start on the snap. 1. With the added twist: B's ball 1st and 10 at the A-44. 2. If the penalty is declined it will be A's ball 1st and 10 at the A-20 and the clock will start on the snap. If the penalty is accepted it will be A's ball 1st and 10 at the A-21 and the clock will start on the snap. B will likely decline the penalty. Now tell me what I overlooked so I can make the corrections ![]() Last edited by JasonTX; Fri Jun 22, 2007 at 02:44pm. |
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On play 2, because the play rolls over the endline it isn't considered a forward fumble OOB? (I am still trying to figure out that darned forward fumble rule) Is that why it wouldn't return to the spot of the fumble if B declined the penalty, hence the touch back?
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Check out my football officials resource page at http://resources.refstripes.com If you have a file you would like me to add, email me and I will get it posted. |
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That's correct. The "fumble forward out of bounds" rule only applies to an OOB spot in the field of play. If a ball is fumbled foward into the EZ and it becomes dead there or is OOB behind the GL, it is a safety or touchback. See 7-2-4-b.
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For NFHS, you actually need to confirm that the first pass was forward. Just because it ended up ahead of where it started doesn't matter; if the initial direction was backward and then, say, it's blown forward, then it was a backward pass...
... which doesn't actually matter on this play, since the second pass will be illegal anyway. So I believe the results for NFHS are exactly the same as Jason's answers for NCAA. |
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B should decline the offside pass to create the fumbled-through-the-endzone situation.
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Pope Francis |
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I don't know if they've fixed things, but at least as of recently there was an incentive for a trailing team in such a situation to throw an illegal forward pass in Fed. The loss of down was not accompanied by a loss of opportunity to snap the ball on an accepted penalty when a half expired. Robert |
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Bob M. |
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Bob M. |
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