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Post by zebrablog on Nov 4, 2011 14:02:50 GMT -5
I have four answers to this, maybe there are others.
Under very limited circumstances a penalty can be assessed during a replay review. Which penalties can be called?
To start you off, I will give you the obvious one:
1. Too many players on the field
You may begin ......... now!
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Post by cj on Nov 4, 2011 14:18:48 GMT -5
Illegal touching (technically a penalty, ball is dead at the spot?)
Kick off out of bounds....(receiver is on the side line and touches a kick off...penalty other team given ball at 40
Deep official calls dpi and flag is picked up by claim of an official ball was tipped....can replay re-institute original penalty by showing ball wasn't tipped
Defensive player coming from out of bounds and not re-establishing before making contact?
They're all guesses and probably reaches.
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Post by zebrablog on Nov 4, 2011 14:42:25 GMT -5
Illegal touching (technically a penalty, ball is dead at the spot?) Illegal touching of a pass or kick can have a penalty (5 yards) attached to it: Replay shows a player who stepped out of bounds and was the first to touch the ball. Also, judging by the picked up DPI penalty a few weeks ago, we can probably determine if an ineligible lineman grazed a pass. That's #2. #3. Also applies if the ball just hits the sideline. I don't think DPI can be reinstated based on a non-tipped pass. When an official recants that penalty, I don't think replay can go in with the foreknowledge of the original call; it has to go with the ultimate call on the field. Hmmm ... interesting. Not sure because of the contact part. Replay can determine touching and recovering the ball, not really for contact. Oh, and I forgot a 5th one, so keep guessing.
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Post by ak482 on Nov 4, 2011 14:47:51 GMT -5
Illegal forward pass if the quarterback was beyond the line of scrimmage.
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Post by zebrablog on Nov 4, 2011 14:48:43 GMT -5
Illegal forward pass if the quarterback was beyond the line of scrimmage. #4
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Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Nov 5, 2011 17:29:26 GMT -5
offsides
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Post by JugglingReferee on Nov 5, 2011 19:53:40 GMT -5
Why do Americans pluralize this word?
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Post by cj on Nov 5, 2011 22:15:45 GMT -5
Why do Americans pluralize this word? Off topic but we talk funny in the USA... For example, we might say the Jets are off side But we also say New York is off side Shouldn't they be the same.....if the Jets are offside is correct, then we should say New York are off side (the way they do in Great Britain and in Canada) since New York and Jets (yes I know it could be the Giants but irrelevant here) in this instance are the same reference.
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Post by zebrablog on Nov 7, 2011 13:58:09 GMT -5
To cap this one off ... adding a #4b, another illegal forward pass call can be assessed when a quarterback flips an apparent lateral pass to a flanker who then throws a forward pass. If replay determines the first action to be a forward pass, the second pass would be illegal, and penalized.
#5, which is technically an illegal free kick as well, but since I am the proctor for this exam, I'm counting it separate. A free kick that is tocuhed by the kicking team prior to the necessary 10 yards.
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Post by JAYJAYSTRIPES on Nov 7, 2011 15:34:26 GMT -5
There is no lateral pass, it's either forward or backward....the backward is a live ball and if muffed or fumbled it can be recovered and advanced. A forward pass if incomplete is dead.
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Post by zebrablog on Nov 8, 2011 11:40:53 GMT -5
There is no lateral pass, You are right. I knew that when I wrote that, but I should've known someone would call a foul on me. I was being economical with my words and used a casual fan's vernacular. What I should have said was that this hypothetical pass was parallel to the line, such that a judgment is made that it was a backwards pass, but later determined to have gone forward in replay. And we've seen that backwards/forward passes apparently have a margin of error of ±3 yards.
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