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Holding away from point of attack
Did anyone else take exception to the article in the Sept issue of Referee magazine concerning not calling holding penalties away from the point of attack. Although there is a little merit to their argument of keeping the game moving and not having a flag fest, I still disagree with them for high school football, and this is why
Here are some questions that arise if this philosophy is undertaken. What do you tell the defensive lineman that is being held, and you witnessed being held when he complains to you? “You couldn’t make that play anyway”. Nothing will incite a vigilante attitude more than telling a defensive player this. Since you aren’t going to call anything away from the play anyway, he will want to institute his own form of football justice which I contend will lead to rough play and unsporting behavior later in the game which you will have to call. Secondly, if the defensive player is away from the “point of attack” why would the backside Tackle or TE need to hold anyway? He shouldn’t be able to get in on the play, right. And how is the official who doesn’t make this holding call suppose to know that the runner isn’t running a reverse, or a cutback, or reversing his field where that backside defensive player could influence the play. Lastly, do you think that coaches will pick up on this philosophy? So they can teach their kids all week that they will run plays away from the oppositions star defensive end, oh and by the way, grab hold of him because the refs won’t call it anyway. |
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Picked up 2 flags Thursday night for this
In a jamboree last week we picked up 2 holding flags away from point of attack. Simply put, the acts did not affect the plays and weren't grossly committed, i. e., there was no take down or any kind of flagrant action.
We explained to the guilty players that next time we would enforce it and tried to coach them up a little bit. Of those players, we had no trouble the rest of the evening. The coaches were not disagreeable about it, either. I think the philosophy behind it is good. If a foul occurs behind the point of attack or away from it and it is an overly aggressive or nearly flagrant foul, then it can be called as is or perhaps signified as an usportsmanlike foul. Otherwise they should be handled moreso with a preventive officiating action. Just a few thoughts-hopefully this helps. |
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I think it is a good philosophy. That being said, if your state's association decides it is not, then that is what should guide you. It is the philosophy in Texas and that is what we teach, don't flag them unless they are out in the open and are obvious to everyone watching.
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![]() Last edited by Jurassic Referee; Mon Aug 20, 2007 at 08:55am. |
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It took me a little time to adopt this sort of "selective" foul calling. It makes sense if you view to role of the official as a game manager and not a rules enforcer.
The reason holding is an issue (when not a safety factor as in a takedown sort of hold) is that the holer is putting the holdee at a disadvantage. If the holdee was not anywhere near the play and thus not a factor to effect the outcome, does the hold really matter? Its the same way with DPI away from the catch. We are now instructed (by NFHS in the rule and case books) not to flag DPI that is clearly away from the reciever catching the pass. Its tough and it takes getting used to not calling something obvious...espically when a coach is all up on you for "missing" the obvious hold that everyone saw. But, like I said, after a lot of mental debate and discussions with other officials...I think it really is a good thing for the game. |
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It took me a while to not go by the book and call everything I saw. I think that is the tendency when you start officiating.
In the hold away from the point of attack, it doesn't mean you ignore it. I classify that as a "talk to" foul, where I will make sure that the offender is told that his hold was seen and that he could be responsible for a long gain being called back. |
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Any hold away from the point of attack should be a talk to. Give it time and that player is going to hold again when they are involved in the point of attack. But if I have a defensive player that claims they are being held, I consider the play or where they are located. If a player is being held but the team lost significant yardage, I tell them "The hold must not have worked very well." Or I tell them to make sure they work hard so we can see it. A lot of times at the HS level players think they are getting held and they give up on the play.
Peace
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For instance, you detect holding by either team, even fairly close to the ball, occur just as the runner is falling to his knees. It wasn't unsafe, it couldn't possibly have affected the dead ball spot, and there was no loose ball to recover. Why is a penalty any improvement to the game compared to a warning in that situation? Quote:
Robert |
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I agree with the philosophy of "talk to" when its away from the point of attack, but I think this may be an interesting twist.
What if there is a penalty on the defense on the same play? Say you work in a state that lets the defense play with 12 and you flag it as illegal participation or there is a low block. Do you still "talk to" the hold? |
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As for the topic here, if it doesn't impact or affect the play, let it go and let them know, "I am watching you." or something like that. Don't say, "that's a hold now knock it off." That opens the door to the "well you should've called it if it was a hold" response. I think the bottom line is, even in HS ball the less flags the better it is for the game. We don't want to call every single thing we see unless it is flagrant/out there for everyone to see. In addition to having quicker and smoother games, I feel you will become a more respected official. There could be a foul on every single play if we called everything.
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Now I know that is the NFL, but all levels of NCAA ball are doing the same. It was mentioned at our NAIA officials meeting and I know it was at the Big 12 meeting, and is in the book put out by Dick Honig, which many major conferences are following. Think about a play like this. 3-2 at B's 13 yard line, and the QB is sacked by the player being held but only for a 2 yard loss. 1) If you don't throw the flag cuz the "held player" made the tackle for a loss, it will be 4-4 at the 15, and a 32 yard field goal would give A 3 pts. 2) If you throw the flag on the "held player" who made the tackle for a loss, team B could accept the penalty and it will be 3-14 at the 25, and team A has much less chance to get points on the board. They would need 10 yards to get the same 32 yard FG, and 14 for a 1st down. You can all make up your own mind but that gives you something to think about. Last edited by MJT; Mon Aug 20, 2007 at 11:50pm. |
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