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Yes. There is no rule preventing a snapper from being an eligible receiver.
An eligible receiver must: 1) Be lined up on the end of the line of scrimmage or in the backfield. 2) Be numbered 1-49 or 80-99. There is no rule requiring that a snapper be an interior lineman. |
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You must be on the line to snap the ball. You can be an end rather than an interior lineman. If the player is an end he is eligible by position. If his number is 1-49 or 80-99 he is eligible by number. In other to be an eligible receiver you must be eligible by both position and number.
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Unless you have really, really long arms.
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Dan |
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On fourth down, all 11 players may have eligible numbers. The snapper does not have to be one of the exceptions, so he can be on the end of the line, and thus eligible. |
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Actually I posed a "long reach" question to the editor of the NCAA football rules committee some time in the 1990s. At that time the rules regarding position of a player on the line were written in a way to suggest "hands" and "arms" were separate items from "body", and it looked as though you could line up with 7 other players on the line standing so as not to occupy much space, and a player with a long reach snapping the ball from the backfield. He said not, and eventually the wording was changed to eliminate that confusion.
Robert |
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