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Unintentional Forward Pass Beyond LOS
4th & 6 @ B34.
A1 - the QB has routinely in this game scrambled and pumpfaked a pass downfield as he runs sometimes as much as 5 yards beyond the line in an effort to freeze the DBs. On this play A1 is at the B32 when he pumpfakes and B99 tackles him from behind while the ball is moving forward and it is released, ball bounces and is recoverred by A88 at the B25 yard line. After the ball hits the ground but before it is recovered B80 spears A1. NFHS ruling? |
Canadian Ruling
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Fumble. UR by Team B. 15 from end of play, AFD. |
If he is hit and his arm is going forward, then it is an incomplete pass. If you judge that the arm was not in a throwing motion when hit and the ball pops out, then you have a fumble. Judgment call pretty much all the way here. But the fact that it might have been a pump fake does not change your ruling. The arm going forward in a throwing motion is all you should judge IMO.
Peace |
It's quite likely that this is a fumble, and only B's foul will be penalized. If you judge that A1 threw a pass, it's a double foul -- replay the down from the previous spot.
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Enforcement of the IHC will depend crucially on the call here. If we rule fumble, then B's foul occurs during the down. The basic spot is the end of the run, repeat the down (though the penalty results in a 1st down in this case). A's options: decline the penalty (A 1/10 @ B25, clock on the ready) or accept the penalty (A 1/10 @ B17, clock on the ready). If it's an IFP, B's IHC foul occurred after the ball became dead on the incomplete pass. So you'd have a live ball foul by A and a dead ball foul by B, and this is never a double foul (Fundamental IX.2). Enforce both. And that's tricky too: the LTG is the B28, and after enforcement for the IFP the ball will be spotted at the B37. With loss of down, B will get the ball. Then enforce B's foul back to the B22, then set the chains. B's ball, 1/10 @ B22, clock starts on the snap. |
You're right, mbyron, and thanks for the correction. Gotta get waked up before reading this board!
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I believe both rule and clinic have been VERY clear on this... regardless of the hit from behind --- if the quarterback attempts a pump fake and the ball comes out, it's an incomplete pass. The only way this is a fumble is if the arm was not in a throwing motion - and it sounds like it definitely was.
Besides, you don't KNOW that this time was going to be a pump fake - this could have been the play they were setting up with the previous pump fakes - so the defense wouldn't bite on the short pass. Let me ask this --- had this happened on the first play of the game, and you hadn't seen any pump fakes yet, would there have been ANY question in your mind that this was an incomplete pass? |
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However, I can also envision plays less completely described plays where the tackler catches up to a rolling passer and the ball comes out. In the generic play R has an important judgment call to make. Some posters were simply pointing out that we have to make this call before we address the penalties. |
What if it's not clear whether the passer was trying to make a forward or a backward pass, but when he's hit as he throws the ball winds up going slightly forward to the receiver? What if it looks more likely that he was trying to make a backward pass than a forward one?
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"Do or do not, there is no try."- Yoda
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Peace |
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We get ourselves wrapped around the axle on this "arm going forward" bit. It helps to determine whether a pass has started, but whether the pass is forward or backwards depends on something else entirely. |
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