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Way to intentionally ground legally?
I just thought of something I don't know why never occurred to me before. In almost all cases, the maker of a forward pass is an eligible receiver. If he wants to make an intentional incomplete pass, why doesn't he just barely push the ball forward out of one hand and then bat it down with the other? And if he's immediately hit so that he's unable to get to the ball for that swat with the other hand, rapid though the action would be, can't it be said (and established by his previous practice) that there was an eligible receiver in the area he was trying to throw it to, namely himself?
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I think this is an interesting potential loophole in the intentional grounding rule, namely 9-5-2d, which states that "a pass intentionally thrown into an area not occupied by an eligible offensive receiver" is illegal. The argument seems valid that the pass is in fact being thrown to an eligible offensive receiver, namely the QB himself.
However, I think that, despite having an eligible receiver "in the area," we should consider this to be a pass "intentionally thrown incomplete to save loss of yardage," which should be ruled as intentional grounding. |
"SECTION 31 ART. 1 . . . Passing the ball is throwing a ball that is in player possession. In a pass, the ball travels in flight."
What you described doesn't meet that definition, at least in my mind. I would very likely rule your play a fumble. |
I guess I see this as similar to a play where a runner, in the process of being tackled, intentionally "fumbles" the ball forward to a teammate. The term "throwing" seems to apply equally to both cases, and the ball certainly travels in flight. If we rule that play an (illegal) forward pass, then I'd say we should rule this a forward pass and therefore intentional grounding also.
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I think it would be as easy to make this as much a throw as is a shovel or chest pass as commonly used to make a short forward pass to a receiver in the backfield. It should be very easy to, for instance, face the right sideline and clearly pass the ball forward across the body with the right hand to knock it down with the left. I don't think anyone's current code makes that a fumble, nor do I think any of them make it an illegal/intentionally incomplete/intentionally grounded pass.
I suppose you could get fancy with it by passing it from behind your butt thru your legs to your other hand, but that might be USC for...uh...making an unnecessarily flashy move? Kind of a taunt? |
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Don't risk your schedule on this theory!! haha
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Peace |
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Then what would you consider the minimum distance (in terms of length or number of steps) for a legal forward pass from a player to himself?
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Peace |
Unbelievable!!!
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Regarding a forward pass to yourself, being deliberately incompleted. This would be a call, based on the judgment of the covering official as to violating (NF:7-5-d or e), the main criteria of which is based on perceived intent, in the exclusive judgment of the covering official. |
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