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Hmmm... food for thought, but the lack of the word MUST leads me to still see nothing untoward here.
Think of it this way. Ball in player possession, player going down braces himself with the ball, sees a back behind him and tries to shuffle him the ball, but the ball ends up rolling on the ground... Are you stopping the play? Calling that a bat? What? that can't be anything but a (bad) backward pass... And no one commented on stopping the play I mentioned should B recover or sack the QB.
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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Are you denying that a scrimmage down must start with a snap? Do you deny that the rules specify either what a snap is, or what must be done to snap the ball? Quote:
In Canadian football AFAIK sliding, rolling, or leaving the ball on the ground is a pass if it's intentional. |
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"ART. 1 . . . Passing the ball is throwing a ball that is in player possession. In a
pass, the ball travels in flight. " Quote:
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I was thinking of the immortal words of Socrates, who said, 'I drank what?'” West Houston Mike |
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Different codes have defined "pass" differently. In NFL & Canadian football, handing the ball is a type of pass, in NCAA & Fed not. "Fumble" could have been defined in its intuitive way, i.e. involuntary loss of possession, but that's not what the rules makers have done. I'm not sure why they wrote them in such a way that a rolling or sliding pass is not a "pass", nor is a leave pass, where the ball is left on the ground. The requirements for the snap went thru some alterations, with interesting differences between American & Canadian development. I'd have to research the development of the definition of "pass" to see if it came after its inclusion in the snap requirements, as I suspect it did. If that's true, then banning the roll-all-the-way snap was a side effect of adopting that definition of pass. Similarly, the NCAA & NFL restrictions on advancing a fumble apply to certain cases that would not be so if you could roll or slide a backwards pass, or just let go of the ball wihtout a throwing motion and have it fall backward. Did they really want it to be illegal for a team to advance the ball by a desperation leave-the-ball-behind-you pass? Maybe yes, maybe no. |
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