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Post by FredFan7 on Feb 13, 2011 17:20:41 GMT -5
On this play, the outside rusher is being held. But the rusher made his sack anyway. Do you flag it in NFHS or since there was no advantage gained out of the hold, do you let it go? What if the team had been driving in the red zone - do you flag it then no matter what?
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Post by zcr57 on Feb 13, 2011 20:58:47 GMT -5
I'm flagging it either way. The offensive lineman got beat, and was clearly trying to gain an advantage.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 22, 2011 14:01:39 GMT -5
In that situation, as soon as I see holding, I'm flagging it. Where it happens, and what happens after the flag is irrelevant.
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Post by FredFan7 on Feb 22, 2011 16:47:47 GMT -5
The reason I ask is because during Super Bowl 45, a player who made a sack complained that he was held. Walt Anderson said that since he got a sack, that's why Anderson passed on the flag. I know, the NFL is a different animal, but I thought it was an interesting philosophy.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 28, 2011 9:38:16 GMT -5
For 22 years I have been taught and taught to others that a foul has to impact the play. Give the play time to develop and act accordingly. I see the hold but am not flagging this. I would have had a full second and half to view, replay and act.
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Post by boonevol on Mar 8, 2011 22:51:58 GMT -5
Flag it, if that QB isn't ruled down and B recovers the loose ball, you've given B an unearned turnover if you pass on it. You can't know how the play is going to end.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 24, 2011 13:17:54 GMT -5
This is not a hold. The defender was not restricted and there was no advantage/disadvantage. He never lost his feet and in fact he was never even slowed down. I don't even see a grasp by the would-be blocker.
If it were a hold, I feel it should be flagged irregardless of the outcome of the play for the simple reason that it could be part of a double foul which without a flag could give team A an unfair advantage.
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