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Nfhs 8.3.9
"After a try, the opponent of the scoring team shall designate which team will kick off."
I had a first year official ask me "WTF", why would they ever choose to kick. I have never seen it happen - anyone else ever see it? What is the history behind this rule?
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Mark NFHS, NCAA, NAFA "If the rule you followed brought you to this, of what use was the rule?" Anton Chigurh - "No Country for Old Men" Last edited by MNBlue; Tue Sep 02, 2008 at 03:32pm. |
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REPLY: I've never seen it, but I've always known it's there. I've heard of it being used in 'blow-out' situations as a 'mercy' tactic. I'll look up the history of the rule tonight when I get home.
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Bob M. |
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I have never seen it, but the following scenario was given many years ago: Team scores with very little time to go up by 2. The opponent feels they have a better chance of recovering a pooch kick than they have of returning the kick to within field goal range.
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This is from the 1924 Illinois-Michigan game:
"Not until the Michigan game on Oct. 18, 1924, did Grange reach legendary status. He returned the opening kickoff 95 yards for a touchdown. Then he scored on runs of 67, 56 and 44 yards. All this in the first 12 minutes. The four touchdowns were as many as Michigan had allowed in the two previous seasons." Illinois scored on the opening kickoff after which Michigan elected to kickoff again. Grange scored kept scoring and Michigan kept wanting to kickoff. Grange socred 4 touchdowns in the first quarter and Michigan kicked off 4 times. According to Red Grange and the Rise of Modern Football by John Martin Carroll the game of footbal in that time was defensive and centered around ball control. The kicking game was important as it could be used to give the opponent poor field position, after wich one mistake by the offense could end up deciding the game. Most Big 10 games in the 1920's were decided by 1 touchdown or less. Offenses did not move the ball much; a deep free kick was a much better way of advancing the ball rather than recieving and attempting to move it while on offense. Last edited by LDUB; Tue Sep 02, 2008 at 07:16pm. |
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Canadian Ruling
Quote:
Same thing exists up here. Never seen it. We rarely mention or talk about it.
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Pope Francis |
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I may not have all this correct, but I think in the old "Hula Bowl" game played in Honululu, the game used this rule in the 4th quarter. If you scored and you were behind, you RECEIVED the next kickoff! I cannot remember if this was an All-Star game or an actual bowl contest. Maybe someone else may remember this.
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Quote:
Robert |
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When I played junior high school football, our league did not have good punters and field position was paramount. Our coaches decided to kick-off many times when scored upon to put the ball in the opponent's end.
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I have seen it used once. The coach was up 66 to 0 when the opponent finally scored against his third stringers. He elected kick off to them. I do not know how the coach knew about the rule. It was class on his part.
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What do you do to inform everyone what is about to happen?
OK, since we're talking about this...
Let's say, A scores on a windy day and a sloggy field. The try for point ties the game early in the 4th quarter. B's captain informs you that they want to kick. How do you go about informing both sides what is about to happen (assuming you're not mic'ed)? Do we call both teams captains out to the 50? Do we only communicate to an A captain, since B knows what's going on? Do we simply trot over to A's coach and tell him what's up? Do we confirm with B's coach that he wants to kick, then go to A's coach to inform him? Is there a signal or indication that R needs to make? Basically, I'm just wondering that how we communicate this to all interested parties in an efficient manner, keeping in mind that it will NEVER happen. Thanks, HLC |
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Quote:
Robert |
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