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Uncatchable
How do you define "uncatchable" (NCAA) for yourself. I have been in many crews and every referee has a different opinion of what an uncatchable pass is.
I know that you would say: no possibility to reach the ball - but what does that mean in reality? ... how many meters/yards should the ball be away in order to call it uncatchable? Last edited by ML99; Thu Apr 29, 2010 at 07:25am. |
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We have the definition in NCAA, but not sure if this helps. It really comes down to your own personal judgement. If there is question, then the rule says it is catchable. If I see a play and my judgement tells me there is no way he could have caught a pass, then it's uncatchable. What I judge to be that, may not be the same as what you judge. I know you already knew all that so I'm just thinking out loud.
A catchable forward pass is an untouched legal forward pass beyond the neutral zone to an eligible player who has a reasonable opportunity to catch the ball. When in question, a legal forward pass is catchable. |
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To me, if the ball lands inbounds or only slightly out of bounds, the presumption is that it is catchable. That presumption can, of course, be overcome by other things, but as Jason said, in NCAA, its catchable until it isn't!
One other thing to think about: when the receiver basically gives up on a ball. When I work back judge, the receiver still has to make the effort, to the extent he can, to get to the ball. If he's knocked down, get's spun around, or otherwise is taken out of the play by the contact of the defender, then this isn't really an issue. However, if he simply gets blocked and then gives up, I'm not going to bail him out with a call even if he possibly could get to the ball. This happens more at the lower levels than it does at the varsity or college level, but I have seen even those receivers go out of bounds and just expect a flag to be thrown. |
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How about this one: B1 enters the neutral zone, and A1, seeing that, calls for the snap and spikes the ball. Do you void the encroachment because A1, satisfied to draw the foul instead of making an attempt to play, didn't justify the penalty? |
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Hmmm ... thanks for your comments - I thought that answering this question isn't easy because everyone has a different understanding for uncatchable. I also think that there is a difference for uncatchable if the player is overthrown (ball over his head) or if the ball is thrown sideways/lateral away from the player.
Would you call a pass uncatchable if the player really tries to get to the ball, but he is: a) overthrown by 1yrd b) overthrown by 2yrds c) overthrown by 3yrds d) overthrown by 4yrds e) ball is thrown sidways away from the player 1yrd f) ball is thrown sidways away from the player 2yrds g) ball is thrown sidways away from the player 3yrds h) ball is thrown sidways away from the player 4yrds i) ball is thrown sidways away from the player 5yrds I know - stupid question, but somewhere you have to draw a line in the sand .... |
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The rules leave a great deal up to officials' judgment. There's a reason for that, and your efforts to define away judgment will be futile.
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Cheers, mb |
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For instance, if the interferer just knocked away the potential receiver's hands as they were jumping straight up for the ball, it would just be a question of whether the ball was too high to reach. OTOH, if the interferer grabbed the potential receiver while a "bomb" throw was still rising, and it eventually came down a long way away from either of them, there's hardly any place on the field the offended player couldn't've gotten to in that time -- and I don't care if the offended player does give up on the ball in that case, he "earns" the penalty option without working for it. Last edited by Robert Goodman; Fri Apr 30, 2010 at 03:24pm. Reason: sp |
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Now, if he gets turned around by the contact or otherwise distracted, then this won't apply. Giving up on the ball and losing his knowledge of where the ball is due to no fault of his own are 2 different things. Quote:
Besides, your play example isn't even similar to what I'm talking about. In your play, the QB didn't "give up" on anything. Quite the opposite -- he ran the play CAUSING the penalty. That's actually good football. A&M used to do this all the time when RC Slocum was coaching. Whenever the defense got into the NZ, the center would automatically snap, everyone else would hold their position, and the QB would usually kneel down. That's a free 5 yards and often a first down. Later, the QB coach realized that QB could sneak and pick up real yardage -- once I think they ran 25 yards or so for a TD as most of the defense froze and the rest had to chase. Taking advantage of an opponent's error is NOT giving up on a play. That's silly. Last edited by Texas Aggie; Fri Apr 30, 2010 at 10:55pm. |
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I was told a long time ago by a D1 Back Judge that if the ball lands inbounds or slightly out of bounds, consider the ball catchable. These athletes in his words do amazing things and you should always give them the benefit of the doubt. That is the standard I use, but then again I am just getting in the college to where I have to make that determination. I will see this year if I am consistent.
Peace
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Let us get into "Good Trouble." ----------------------------------------------------------- Charles Michael “Mick” Chambers (1947-2010) |
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Anyway, if the contact was against a team A player who wasn't attempting at that time to catch the pass, how does it qualify as interference, regardless of the catchability of the ball? If the contact was against a team B player during the down before the pass, it could still be interference because it would be silly to have to presume he was preparing for an interception of a ball that hadn't been thrown yet. |
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