When was roughing the passer




















To me it looks like something happened to the rules in , then again in The rule was discussed. The smaller increase from the - plateau vs what we see in and could simple be because crews were still getting used to calling the new rule change. If it is then we should fix the project to see if it fits with and If it does you have an explanation. If not we have something interesting.

So that with the changes seems to explain the two increases resulting in the steps. I almost don't want it to be fixed because I want the image of Chase Young or TJ Watt doing an elbow slam on a thrown yellow flag. That sentence is confusing the way you meant it.

I think the most reasonable interpretation of "Saints in Week 1" is the current season, and that your "Bears in " is the example from a previous year. But yeah, you need to rewrite that sentence: "If Brady ends up throwing flutterballs like he did against the Saints in Week 1 and against the Bears in The Clark penalty on Allen wasn't an egregiously bad call, as has already been mentioned it fits the definition of what isn't allowed.

I think the problem most have with it is the leverage of the situation. But that's incidental. It does point to the real problem though: no one wants a hard fought football game to be decided by someone's judgment, where someone else's judgment would have led them to not intervene. Which is completely understandable. Parsing individual calls though probably isn't the answer, because there'll always be grey areas or disagreement. Now I'm not saying I know how to do that, but if I were the league I'd be more concerned with consistency and credibility than with trying to cover every eventuality, all the time.

And I agree with Mike that if there's going to be a flag anyway someone will decide to make it count. I don't disagree - but that's never going to be a realistic thing. Holding, PI, catches, etc, are all going to always require judgement calls. The Allen roughing call had more than a minor impact on that game. If the play stands, the Chiefs have the ball in good field position down 11 with nearly the entire fourth quarter left to play.

Instead, their weak, exhausted defense let the Bills march down the field again, and by the time the Chiefs saw the ball again, they were down 18 points with six minutes to play. They also had the whole rain delay and forced the Bills to punt three times in a row after 4 or fewer plays. The KC D is bad, but exhaustion is no excuse. The Bills never should have been in that spot 3rd and long in the shadow of their own end zone in the first place, full stop.

NOT in the wee hours of Monday morning, but near midnight on Monday, as the Ravens completed their comeback against the Indy Abominations. A comeback aided, in large part, by a rare roughing the passer call in favor of Lamar Jackson. Jackson even commented after the game that the call on roughing him was so rare, he was able to thank the official by name. Land Clark. As to why roughing is called so rarely on behalf of Lamar, as a good writer I know put it, "make of it what you will.

The officials probably think the Jets will trade for him as a quarterback, therefore he doesn't deserve a flag. I would love for an Eagles upset to be remotely possible, but even if Brady decides to rip his arm tendons out or something, I can't see the Eagles being able to capitalize.

The Bucs defense is just built to destroy offenses like theirs. Sirianni: OK, Jalen, our plan is to throw screens, slants, wheels - quick passes to guys that are open. Maybe a few runs to get Miles warmed up too. Then when the linebackers close in, and safeties come down to help, we sucker-punch 'em with a bomb to Watkins or DeVonta. Fundamental football. Hurts: Solid plan, Coach!

The Allen roughing call was clearly a make-up for a ridiculous ticky-tack Holding call on Mitch Morse the play prior. In the 2nd paragraph after the table the quote is "all or most" of the weight, while two paragraphs down it's "all or part".

I hope "most" is the actual rule. To me, it looked like a legitimate call. Allen was tackled, and then Clark added to it, in an attempt to injure. He was trying to not put body weight on the quarterback. His foot got caught in the ground. For him to tear his ACL, nobody wants that. What do you want the guy to do? You gotta put the guy down. How much is too much weight? What technique do you use? How do you go about it? Fans are frustrated with the high number of penalties killing the momentum of games with too many breaks in the action already.

Defenders are frustrated at the impossibility of the task they are being asked to perform. It seems Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott is the only player who is ready to embrace the new rule.

Simple as that. Another play that stood out last week against the Falcons was when multiple Saints defenders were in hot pursuit of quarterback Matt Ryan. Ryan appeared to give himself up close to the sideline after scrambling out of the pocket.

The defenders immediately halted their pursuit. In that title victory over Chicago, he'd passed for an astounding yards, a championship-game total no rookie QB would surpass for 75 years. In , NFL teams had averaged fewer than 12 points and six completions a game.

Baugh set a completion record 81 in '37 and threw for 1, yards. A decade later, he'd amass nearly 3, yards 2, So versatile was the tall Texan that in he led the league in passing, interceptions and punting. But that instant success immediately made Baugh and his imitators a target in the black-and-blue world of pro football. You never saw him just stand there, watching. You had to protect yourself because [they] were going to flatten you every time. If you were a good ballplayer, they tried to get you out of there.

So, wrapping the upper torso or arms of the quarterback is allowed. Players can also tackle the quarterback without getting a roughing the passer call if they land without putting their entire body weight on the quarterback. Suppose a linebacker sacks the passer and immediately rolls away from the tackle or braces in a way to minimize the blow.

In that case, they can effectively complete a tackle without getting a penalty. As always, defensive players must never touch the head, neck, or facemask of another player. Not hitting the head, neck, or facemasks is especially true for hits on the quarterback.

As far as rules go, roughing the passer is one that seems to evolve after legal in-game hits cause star quarterbacks to miss several games. In a week one game between the Minnesota Vikings and the Green Bay Packers, Barr hit Rodgers and forced him to land on his right shoulder, breaking his collarbone.

The injury caused Rodgers to miss most of the rest of the season. In a game between the Oakland Raiders and Miami Dolphins, the rule calling was up in the air.



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