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There was no kick. The accepted penalty wiped that out. Proceed just as you would on any other 4th down play where a penalty resulted in a first down.
Clock on the ready.
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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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You are correct, Scuba, the clock will start on the snap:
NFHS 3-4-3 ART. 3 . . . The clock shall start with the snap or when any free kick is touched, other than first touching by K, if the clock was stopped because: a. The ball goes out of bounds. b. B or R is awarded a new series. c. Either team is awarded a new series following a legal kick. d. The ball becomes dead behind the goal line. e. A legal or illegal forward pass is incomplete. f. A request for a charged or TV/radio time-out is granted. g. A period ends. h. A team attempts to consume time illegally. i. The penalty for a delay of game foul is accepted. j. A fair catch is made.
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Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there. - Will Rogers |
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Quote:
After an incomplete pass we start the clock on the snap too, even if there's an accepted DPI penalty. 3-4-3e Different section of 3-4-3, but same thinking. |
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Thanks
Thank you for the replies. For those who think the kick was wiped out I found the following case play:
3.4.3 SITUATION G: A1 throws an incomplete pass on third down. During the play, A3 holds. B accepts the penalty. RULING: After enforcement, the clock shall start on the snap. (3-4-3e). The incomplete pass caused the clock to stop and dictates how the clock will start after enforcing the penalty. This case is very similar to the question I asked and validates (in my mind) the reposnses for starting on the snap. EDIT: Oops, should have read Maven's response just before this, well at least I added the case play. Last edited by Scuba_ref; Tue Oct 09, 2012 at 04:23pm. |
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The reason for starting on the snap rather than the RFP following a new series after a legal kick is to allow the teams to get their new personnel on the field.
If they don't have to change personnel, start on the RFP. |
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Argh... my bad. Worse --- I believe I blew this one on the field last year. And none of my crew that day (sub-V, so not a standard "crew") noticed or mentioned it.
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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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![]() My understanding of NFHS clock rules became so much clearer when someone encouraged me to memorize the "major stoppers" in 3-4-3. The provision about "legal kick" is tricky because it's a major stopper only when you have a legal kick AND a new series (to either team). If we have a punt, K holds before the kick, and R accepts the penalty, clock runs on the RFP. Perhaps you were thinking along these lines? |
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Part of the problem is that we don't have a real clear set of timing rules. It's always been "use the 2005 rules" which isn't exactly right and good luck if you don't have a 2005 book.
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Even if you’re on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there. - Will Rogers |
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