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  #1 (permalink)  
Old Sun Dec 01, 2013, 06:26pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BadNewsRef View Post
In your opinion.
I wouldn't think that a couple yards meets many people's definition of "well in front of."
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Old Mon Dec 02, 2013, 10:21am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hbk314 View Post
I wouldn't think that a couple yards meets many people's definition of "well in front of."
Just "in front of" can be enough.
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  #3 (permalink)  
Old Mon Dec 02, 2013, 11:19am
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Originally Posted by MD Longhorn View Post
Just "in front of" can be enough.
Ask them whether a player can push an opponent off the ball's path, then turn around & catch the ball in front of where they made player-player contact, and vitiate the interference thereby.
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Old Mon Dec 02, 2013, 02:54pm
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Originally Posted by Robert Goodman View Post
Ask them whether a player can push an opponent off the ball's path, then turn around & catch the ball in front of where they made player-player contact, and vitiate the interference thereby.
You are describing a completely different play. In your scenario the player making contact is the same player who intercepted the pass. In the two examples mentioned here (both involving Carolina) the defender on the receiver and the intercepter are two different people.
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Old Mon Dec 02, 2013, 02:56pm
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Originally Posted by bisonlj View Post
You are describing a completely different play. In your scenario the player making contact is the same player who intercepted the pass. In the two examples mentioned here (both involving Carolina) the defender on the receiver and the intercepter are two different people.
That really shouldn't matter. One player clearing out a receiver while another player picks the ball off in a space the receiver could have gotten to is still pass interference.
  #6 (permalink)  
Old Tue Dec 03, 2013, 07:00am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hbk314 View Post
That really shouldn't matter. One player clearing out a receiver while another player picks the ball off in a space the receiver could have gotten to is still pass interference.
Isn't the bolded a judgement call?
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Old Tue Dec 03, 2013, 08:19am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hbk314 View Post
That really shouldn't matter. One player clearing out a receiver while another player picks the ball off in a space the receiver could have gotten to is still pass interference.
The key is an underthrown pass. I'm sorry you are failing to accept the stated philosophies used by most NCAA conferences and apparently the NFL. These are not personal philosophies of the people on this board. You can disagree with the philosophy all day but if you work at those levels and don't follow those philosophies you will not be working long.

This is similar to the common philosophy of not calling a hold on the backside tackle when the sweep goes the other way. You may be technically right using the letter of the rule, but if you called that every time you saw it, you wouldn't be working long.
  #8 (permalink)  
Old Tue Dec 03, 2013, 10:09am
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bisonlj View Post
The key is an underthrown pass. I'm sorry you are failing to accept the stated philosophies used by most NCAA conferences and apparently the NFL. These are not personal philosophies of the people on this board. You can disagree with the philosophy all day but if you work at those levels and don't follow those philosophies you will not be working long.

This is similar to the common philosophy of not calling a hold on the backside tackle when the sweep goes the other way. You may be technically right using the letter of the rule, but if you called that every time you saw it, you wouldn't be working long.
The difference is that a hold on the other side of the field isn't likely to impact the play, but the scenario I cited completely determines the outcome of a play.

If the philosophy calls for a no-call of pass interference on a play where a receiver is physically prevented from reaching a pass he could have gotten to, merely because the ball is picked off before it gets to the position he was forced to, then the philosophy makes zero sense.

Unless we're imagining a different play.
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