Football rules question the sequel
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Football rules question the sequel
On a punt, if the punt returner calls for a fair catch, but does not catch it, can one of his teammates advance the ball?
Re: Football rules question the sequel
2009 NCAA Football Rule 6-5, Article 2 (page FR-93):
So your answer is no.No Advance
ARTICLE 2. No Team B player shall carry a caught or recovered ball more than
two steps in any direction after a valid or invalid fair catch signal by any Team B
player (A.R. 6-5-2-I-IV).
PENALTY—Dead-ball foul. Five yards from the succeeding spot [S7 and
S21].
Re: Football rules question the sequel
The play should be blown dead, immediately following a reception by B. If someone attempts to advance the ball, it is a delay of game foul, taken from the spot of the catch.
Re: Football rules question the sequel
in the instance that prompted the question, or so I'm guessing, (which happened pretty much right in front of my seats), there wasn't a clean catch. The returner signaled a fair catch, but then backed away from the ball, which hit the turf. Then another player on the return team picked it up off a bounce or two, took a few steps, and was tackled.grizband wrote:The play should be blown dead, immediately following a reception by B. If someone attempts to advance the ball, it is a delay of game foul, taken from the spot of the catch.
I suppose the officials could have thrown a flag (actually, I think they might have, but then waved it off after a conference), but given the situation, it was a good no-call. I'm not sure the guy that picked up the ball had seen the fair catch signal.
Re: Football rules question the sequel
I'm not sure how college rules differ from high school, but if this situation happened in high school it is still technically a penalty. Once any player on the receiving team signals fair catch, no team B player may advance the punt.JayJ79 wrote:in the instance that prompted the question, or so I'm guessing, (which happened pretty much right in front of my seats), there wasn't a clean catch. The returner signaled a fair catch, but then backed away from the ball, which hit the turf. Then another player on the return team picked it up off a bounce or two, took a few steps, and was tackled.grizband wrote:The play should be blown dead, immediately following a reception by B. If someone attempts to advance the ball, it is a delay of game foul, taken from the spot of the catch.
I suppose the officials could have thrown a flag (actually, I think they might have, but then waved it off after a conference), but given the situation, it was a good no-call. I'm not sure the guy that picked up the ball had seen the fair catch signal.
Re: Football rules question the sequel
I'm not sure how college rules differ from high school, but if this situation happened in high school it is still technically a penalty. Once any player on the receiving team signals fair catch, no team B player may advance the punt.JayJ79 wrote:in the instance that prompted the question, or so I'm guessing, (which happened pretty much right in front of my seats), there wasn't a clean catch. The returner signaled a fair catch, but then backed away from the ball, which hit the turf. Then another player on the return team picked it up off a bounce or two, took a few steps, and was tackled.grizband wrote:The play should be blown dead, immediately following a reception by B. If someone attempts to advance the ball, it is a delay of game foul, taken from the spot of the catch.
I suppose the officials could have thrown a flag (actually, I think they might have, but then waved it off after a conference), but given the situation, it was a good no-call. I'm not sure the guy that picked up the ball had seen the fair catch signal.
Re: Football rules question the sequel
I'm not sure how college rules differ from high school in this instance, but if this situation happened in high school it is still technically a penalty. Once any player on the receiving team signals fair catch, no team B player may advance the punt.JayJ79 wrote:in the instance that prompted the question, or so I'm guessing, (which happened pretty much right in front of my seats), there wasn't a clean catch. The returner signaled a fair catch, but then backed away from the ball, which hit the turf. Then another player on the return team picked it up off a bounce or two, took a few steps, and was tackled.grizband wrote:The play should be blown dead, immediately following a reception by B. If someone attempts to advance the ball, it is a delay of game foul, taken from the spot of the catch.
I suppose the officials could have thrown a flag (actually, I think they might have, but then waved it off after a conference), but given the situation, it was a good no-call. I'm not sure the guy that picked up the ball had seen the fair catch signal.
Re: Football rules question the sequel
It's technically a penalty in college too (see my above post that includes the quote from the NCAA rulebook).
The refs just didn't call it.
I suppose Indiana State could gripe about that, but frankly, I don't think those 5 yards would have changed the game much.
The refs just didn't call it.
I suppose Indiana State could gripe about that, but frankly, I don't think those 5 yards would have changed the game much.
Re: Football rules question the sequel
You're probably correct, wouldn't have altered the game - also, sorry about the triple post.JayJ79 wrote:It's technically a penalty in college too (see my above post that includes the quote from the NCAA rulebook).
The refs just didn't call it.
I suppose Indiana State could gripe about that, but frankly, I don't think those 5 yards would have changed the game much.
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Re: Football rules question the sequel
The play was blown dead as soon as he touched it. He wasn't given the advance. 
