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Kasay: Can a Kicker Re-set?
In the Carolina game last night on the last second FG attempt K Kasay started forward before the snap , stopped, then kicked after the snap.
Is this legal? Can certain positions re-set without penalty? |
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If it "simulated action at the snap," could you flag it?
(Standard disclaimers about NFL rules vs. our rules, etc. etc. etc.)
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"And I'm not just some fan, I've refereed football and basketball in addition to all the baseball I've umpired. I've never made a call that horrible in my life in any sport."---Greatest. Official. Ever. |
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Any A player can shift, as long as they come to a complete stop for 1 second prior to the snap, and they have not placed their hands on or near the ground yet. I think for NCAA it is below the knees though. Actually, that isn't entirely accurate, as the rules say anyone can shift, but that a player with his hand at or near the ground will false start if they bring them up.
All 11 of them can go out, line up in a formation, then all 11 can shift to a new formation. More commonly, the interior lineman can certainly shift from an "up" position to a down position, for example. |
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This brings up something I never thought of before. I didn't see the play but based on the description, there is no foul here. If he did that and stopped but another player started in motion within a second of him stopping, you would have an illegal motion penalty (not all players were set for 1 second before the player went in motion).
This makes me wonder though...if the kicker starts forward before the snap and is still moving forward at the snap, you technically have an illegal motion. I can't imagine anyone would ever flag that because he is not gaining any kind of an advantage (unless they run a fake and he's getting a head start on going downfield). |
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Also, NFHS 7-2-7 Only one A player may be in motion at the snap and then only if such motion is not toward his opponent's goal line. Except for the player "under the snapper," as outlined in Article 3, the player in motion shall be atleast 5 yards behind his line of scrimmage at the snap if he started from any position not clearly behind the line and did not establish as a back by stopping for atleast one full second while no part of his body is breaking the vertical plane through the waistline of his nearest teammate who is on the line of scrimmage. |
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But yes, I've seen this happen a couple times in my lifetime where the kicker "stutters" before he starts. I always wondered if this was illegal/forward motion or a false start... but it was never called. |
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You haven't.
You may have seen two or more guys shift before. But you haven't seen two guys in motion at the snap without a penalty unless somebody really messed up.
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"And I'm not just some fan, I've refereed football and basketball in addition to all the baseball I've umpired. I've never made a call that horrible in my life in any sport."---Greatest. Official. Ever. |
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AR 7-1-4-IV After the Team A players have stopped for one second, end A88 runs wide and stops, and before one second elapses, back A36 starts moving backward. RULING: Legal. I can't find anything in the NFHS book that makes me think the Fed is any different to NCAA, but I'm no High School Rules expert, so happy to defer to the other side of the Pond on that one......
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Sorry Death, you lose.... It was Professor Plum! |
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correct. i saw them both move a few seconds before the snap, but one of them set before the snap. |
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They both should have reset and then one of them (or another back/end) could have gone in motion after a second--although in the NFL they seem to take liberty with the "one second." I'm not sure exactly how it is written in NFL rules, but it seems guys are often sent for less than a second before a snap, and it is deemed legal.
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If the play is designed to fool someone, make sure you aren't the fool. |
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To suggest that the kicker "set to a new position" when he stutter-stepped during his kicking motion is just nonsense, and looking for trouble that doesn't exist. More than likely the stutter happened AFTER the snap had begun, (or too close to it for the human eye to discern) and the kicker, and everyone else on offense is free to move as they choose (defense as well).
Clearly, he did not gain any, "unfair advantage". |
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