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It's not unusual (around here, at least) to see teams "squib kick" with the ball lying stationary on the ground and parallel to the yardlines.
I read the rule to mean that the ball can't be moving when it's kicked. |
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What do you think "fixed position" means? Loose (but motionless) on the ground is absolutely a fixed position. Fixed means not moving.
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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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Quote:
Fixed is a simple English word, as you've alluded to. Nowhere in my dictionary under the word fixed does it say, "attached to a tee" or "held in position by a holder". Fixed, very simply, means motionless. "Affixed" means what you are implying. "Fixed" does not.
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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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By rule in this case would the ball have to be parallel to the sidelines or could it be perpendicular as well?
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OK either way by rule. But I've never seen a team "squib kick" the pointed end of the ball.
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To refine the "fixed position on the ground" language even further, what do you think of this? Player spins the ball on the ground in place on its point like a top and then kicks it. (My sister was able to do that.) Place kick? I think so, if the ball's contact point with the ground isn't moving.
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