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Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 4:18 pm
by Terry Webster
Someone wrote that it should have been a touchback and that the refs messed it up? Is that true?

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 4:24 pm
by 03Mustang
No, it wasn’t a touchback. Just a terrible play by our guys.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 4:29 pm
by Junior
It’s not a touchback on a KO until it hits the ground in the end zone I thought?

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 5:33 pm
by smitty329
Hindsight - Option 1 block the Tulsa player - I think it would have made it to the end zone before other players got to it. Would have had the ball at the 25. Option 2 - Fall on it - Our ball at the 1 or 2 yard line. Obvious confusion at the time.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 6:02 pm
by Three Putt
03Mustang wrote:No, it wasn’t a touchback. Just a terrible play by our guys.

It should have been a touchback. I looked up the rule in the NCAA rule book:
On page FR65
When a free kick untouched by Team B ( receiving team ) touches the ground on or behind Team B’s end zone, the ball becomes dead and belongs to Team B. If the result of the free kick is a touchback for Team B, they will put the ball in play at their 25-yard line.

SMU (Team B) did not touch the ball. Result of the play is a Touchback.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 6:05 pm
by mrydel
Three Putt wrote:
03Mustang wrote:No, it wasn’t a touchback. Just a terrible play by our guys.

It should have been a touchback. I looked up the rule in the NCAA rule book:
On page FR65
When a free kick untouched by Team B ( receiving team ) touches the ground on or behind Team B’s end zone, the ball becomes dead and belongs to Team B. If the result of the free kick is a touchback for Team B, they will put the ball in play at their 25-yard line.

SMU (Team B) did not touch the ball. Result of the play is a Touchback.

I interpret that as saying the ball must land in or beyond the end zone. It obviously did not do that. When it hit the ground short of the end zone I would think it is a live ball.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 6:38 pm
by SMUvet
Live ball. Think about an onside kick. The ball is live (like a fumble) but must go past the initial ten yards to legally be recoverable. That was essentially an onsides kick.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 6:42 pm
by Charleston Pony
We never touched that ball but Tulsa defender 1st made contact at the one yard line and secured the ball in the end zone. It was the right call and hopefully a learning experience for our guys.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 7:02 pm
by Three Putt
Guys, it does not have to land in the end zone. It can bounce in there. Even if it was touched by the kicking team prior to that, as long as it isn’t touched by the receiving team, the ball is NOT live, and should be ruled a Touchback. It is only live if it doesn’t reach the end zone. Read the rule I posted. It’s very clear. If the Tulsa player had recovered the ball at the 1, they would have the ball at the point of recovery. Once it touched the ground in the end zone, it’s a touchback.

It was not the right call by the officials, period!

If there is a statement released by the AAC will you believe me then?

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 7:03 pm
by DanFreibergerForHeisman
It was a touchdown. No question at all that's the rule.

Brutal teams again last night. Definitely an area where we need to improve if we are going to do what we should this season.

Fortunately we met a team with a worse kicking situation than ours but we really need to fix it quickly!

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Sun Oct 06, 2019 7:36 pm
by sadderbudweiser
SMUvet wrote:Live ball. Think about an onside kick. The ball is live (like a fumble) but must go past the initial ten yards to legally be recoverable. That was essentially an onsides kick.



Ding Ding! Winner.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Mon Oct 07, 2019 7:37 am
by HubbaHubba
I think Three Putt is right. The ball was never touched by SMU and ends up in the end zone. Think about an onside kick. If onside kick bounces down the field and stops in the end zone it is SMU ball. Plenty of kickoffs land on the 5 and roll in for a touch back. Haven't you noticed the refs blowing the whistle with the ball just sitting in the end zone untouched? The rule states if it ends up there (and no where does it stipulate flying, bouncing, rolling, prancing, pirouetting, knocked forward by kicking team player, etc) without the receiving team touching it it is a touch back. If the Tulsa player had possession on the 1 yard line that would be Tulsa's ball on the 1. A recovered free kick can not be advanced. We were totally hosed on that call.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Mon Oct 07, 2019 10:19 am
by CA Mustang
Charleston Pony wrote:We never touched that ball but Tulsa defender 1st made contact at the one yard line and secured the ball in the end zone. It was the right call and hopefully a learning experience for our guys.

This is it right here. The Tulsa player touched the ball at the one and recovered it in the end zone. SMU players guessed wrong in hoping the ball would either go out of bounds or into the end zone before anyone touched it.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Mon Oct 07, 2019 10:41 am
by HubbaHubba
The Tulsa player was not on the receiving team and did not control the ball before it went into the end zone. Otherwise it would have been their ball where he recovered it. The ball is "live" after it goes 10 yards or after it is touched by the receiving team. It "dies" if it reaches the end zone before the receiving team touches it. Whether or not Tulsa touched it is irrelevant unless they had control of it. It can be resurrected (can I get an amen) if the receiving team attempts to bring it out of the end zone.

Re: Kickoff snafu

PostPosted: Mon Oct 07, 2019 11:49 am
by HarvCrimYaleBlue
Hubba the receiving team does not have to touch the ball for it to be “live” in the end zone.

To help everyone think about it another way...if the receiving team catches the ball in the air or via rolling into the end zone the receiver has to down the ball to make it dead and be considered a touchback. If no knee, it is still live. 999/1,000 times the receiving team happens to be the one to touch the ball first but that does not matter.

In 2018 there was a proposed rule change in the NFL to eliminate this scenario meaning: kick off + ball untouched by receiving team + end zone = dead ball / touchback. Not sure if it was adopted for 2019.