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1 point safety
I posted on FB,
"K-State block Oregon's PAT. The ball is recovered by KSU in the field of play. The player runs into his own end zone, tosses the ball to a teammate who fumbles the ball and is tackle in the end zone. Isn't that a 1 point safety?" Upon the return from commercial, Ron Cherry confirmed my suspicions. Never seen it before. |
I called it! As a trivia buff, this is one of those plays that is a great trivia question.
Can B score anything if they return the ball for a TD? If not, then I think the Canadian rule is better: it's dead when B is deemed to have possession. |
It is more likely to happen in a college game because the play is not immediately dead on a blocked kick or even a fumble recovery.
I am hearing it last happen in a Texas-Texas Tech game in 2004. Peace |
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Rarest play in NCAA Football (1pt safety) - YouTube |
Just saw the replay on Sportscenter, including the white-hat's address to the crowd.
Thought he did a great job of explaining. |
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Now, if Oregon had gone for two and fumbled at the two, and K-State did the same thing, running into the end zone and get stopped there, would it be a two point safety? |
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The scoring for a safety during a try is 1 point. Period. |
Sure looked like an illegal forward pass before the eventual end of the play. Didn't matter, of course.
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Think the FBS crews will be prepping that one before next season? :D |
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I also appeared to be an illegal forward pass in the end zone, but the result would have been the same. |
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That woulda been a hell of a call. |
I agree, it was definitely an illegal forward pass. Thought that as soon as I saw it.
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In the Texas game I noticed from the video that Texas kicked off as normal as if it was after a TD and not a 2-pt. safety. |
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Fouls During a Try After a Change of Team Possession ARTICLE 4. a. Distance penalties against either team are declined by rule (Exception: Penalties for flagrant personal fouls, unsportsmanlike conduct fouls, dead-ball personal fouls and live-ball fouls treated as dead-ball fouls are enforced on the succeeding kickoff or at the succeeding spot in extra periods. See Rule 8-3-5.) (A.R. 8-3-4-I and II). b. A score by a team committing a foul during the down is canceled (A.R. 8-3- 2-VII). c. If both teams foul during the down and Team B had not fouled before the change of possession, the fouls offset, the down is not repeated, and the try is over. |
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That just doesn't make good sense. |
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I'm part of a very good rules group that meets all summer and I remember covering this exact scenario with them this past summer. It was sorta laughed off as a one-in-a-million scenario, but now that we've seen it happen... |
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Meanwhile "distance penalties" occurs twice. Once is in the provision referenced here, 8-3-4a, and the other is in 10-2-5, regarding penalties whose distance enforcement would result in free kick restraining lines inside the 5. I find it very reasonable to interpret all of these occurrences as referring to the distance portion of a penalty that includes a distance enforcement. Otherwise, consider 5-2-6 in light of what "distance penalty" would have to mean as opposed to simply "penalty". The enforcement for any infraction between downs that counts officially as a penalty includes a distance, so the word "distance" in "distance penalty" as used there is superfluous in distinguishing penalties. But as the Committee should not be thought to have put in a superfluous word, the only meaning left would be the distance portion of a penalty. We know that it's possible to decline the distance portion of a penalty separately from the spot the penalty is taken from. So that's what "distance penalty" must mean wherever it occurs in the rule book. Such a meaning is reasonable, because after possession changes on a try, there's never going to be a down repeated by what had been team B. The only penalties on team B of any consequence are those that prevent a score by B (in which case the spot is immaterial), those that result in a safety (as discussed here, where the distance is immaterial), and those that would be enforced on a succeeding down (which this provision explictly treats separately). So although the Rules Committee could and should be clearer, Redding kicked this call. |
AR 8-3-4 II has a similar play except the foul is a clip in the end zone. The AR states the penalty is declined by rule. As we know NCAA rules have exceptions. The only exception for penalties that are not declined by rule after a change of possession on Trys are Flagrant PF's, UC, Dead Ball PF's, and Live Balls fouls treated as Dead Ball fouls. All other fouls are declined by rule and any scores are cancelled. An illegal forward pass does not fall under any of those exceptions.
So, with this AR it certainly appears to be consistent with Reddings interpretation because even a clipping foul has a "distance penalty" |
I hate to disagree with Redding, of course.
But if you read this rule, the distance penalty is cancelled. Fine there. Step 2 - Scores by the team that committed the penalty are cancelled. In this case, the score is not made by the team that committed the penalty - it's scored by the other team. This is more similar to a play where A goes for 2, B commits a distance penalty, and A scores anyway - the penalty is declined, but the score is not cancelled. |
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Maybe this will get changed, maybe it won't, but as of right now, there wouldn't be a safety scored in a game played under NCAA rules if that illegal forward pass was completed and the ball came out of the end zone. |
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