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NFL will look at the fumble-out-of-end-zone rule


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4 hours ago, Scott7975 said:

Good I hate this rule.  At least give the ball back to the offense even if its at the original line of scrimmage.  Thats far better than awarding an undeserved touchback.  Personally I think the ball should just go to where the fumble occurred.  Why not?

 

So my answer on why not is becauae the offense has fumbled the ball and not recovered it. They should suffer some ill effect from that IMO. Hence I prefer the original line of scrimmage option. 

4 hours ago, Alpo Chino said:

What happens if it's a sack fumble that goes out of the endzone?

 

If the defense forces a sack fumble and the ball goes out of the endzone without another defensive player touching it (i.e. so a defender can't just knock it out on purpose) I'd award a safety. 

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1 hour ago, GunnerBill said:

 

So my answer on why not is becauae the offense has fumbled the ball and not recovered it. They should suffer some ill effect from that IMO. Hence I prefer the original line of scrimmage option. 

 

 

If this happened on the rest of the field, like lets say someone fumbled and the ball went out the sideline on the 10 after gaining 20 yards, would they not get the ball at the 10?  If it went out at the 1 then they would get the ball at the 1 yes?  Why should it be different if the ball went a yard further and went out after the goal line?  Thats why I don't understand that view.

 

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6 minutes ago, Scott7975 said:

 

If this happened on the rest of the field, like lets say someone fumbled and the ball went out the sideline on the 10 after gaining 20 yards, would they not get the ball at the 10?  If it went out at the 1 then they would get the ball at the 1 yes?  Why should it be different if the ball went a yard further and went out after the goal line?  Thats why I don't understand that view.

 

 

No I've said above I'd change it at the sideline too and have long been of this view. If the offense fumbles and does not recover that fumble there should be consequences for that. I'd go back to the line of scrimmage and treat it like an incomplete pass. If a defense forces a fumble they should get some benefit of that even if the ball goes out at the sideline.

 

An unrecovered fumble out of bounds should essentially be a neutral play IMO. My only exception would be if a defense forced a fumble that went out of the back of the endzone untouched by another player in which case I would give them a safety not just a touchback. 

Edited by GunnerBill
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1 minute ago, GunnerBill said:

 

No I've said above I'd change it at the sideline too and have long been of this view. If the offense fumbles and does not recover that fumble there should be consequences for that. I'd go back to the line of scrimmage and treat it like an incomplete pass. If a defense forces a fumble they should get some benefit of that even if the ball goes out at the sideline.

 

An unrecovered fumble out of bounds should essentially be a neutral play IMO. My only exception would be if a defense forced a fumble that went out of the back of the endzone untouched by another player in which case I would give them a safety not just a touchback. 

 

Ok, I don't agree with you, but your stance on the endzone stuff makes sense if that's the way it worked for the rest of the game.  It doesn't work that way though and it's unlikely to change.

 

To me, the benefit of the defense causing the fumble is a chance at getting the ball back.  If they don't capitalize on that chance and recover then that's just not completing the opportunity.

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Obvious solution, offense fumbles out of bounds, 5 yard penalty from spot of fumble, plus loss of down.

 

The same rule applies everywhere except in the offense's own end zone where it counts as a safety similar to the way a holding call in the end zone would.

 

That would give you a consistent set of rules everywhere on the field.  If you make it a 10-yard penalty, it would effectively be the same as illegal batting and the referee would not have to judge whether the offensive player intentionally knocked it out of bounds or not.

 

Edited by Billy Claude
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58 minutes ago, Scott7975 said:

 

Ok, I don't agree with you, but your stance on the endzone stuff makes sense if that's the way it worked for the rest of the game.  It doesn't work that way though and it's unlikely to change.

 

To me, the benefit of the defense causing the fumble is a chance at getting the ball back.  If they don't capitalize on that chance and recover then that's just not completing the opportunity.

 

I agree it is unlikely to change more widely. But I still think that is the best balance of fairness. The rule at the moment over favours the offense everywhere but through the endzone where it over favours the defense . 

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On 12/14/2023 at 2:24 PM, NewEra said:

Giving the opposing team the possession of the ball for potentially doing nothing is perfect?  🤷🏻‍♂️ 

 

I’d give the ball to the offense somewhere between the 10 and the 20.  The defense shouldn’t get the ball unless they recover it imo. 

Not sure this makes since.

 

In your scenario, if a team had the ball on their own one yard like, they could just fumble the ball out of the end zone and improve their position by 10 to 20 yards.

 

That would never work.

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14 minutes ago, longtimebillsfan said:

Not sure this makes since.

 

In your scenario, if a team had the ball on their own one yard like, they could just fumble the ball out of the end zone and improve their position by 10 to 20 yards.

 

That would never work.

🤦🏻‍♂️ 

 

Wrong end zone my man.  Only if the offense fumbles the ball out of the end zone they are scoring on.  If it’s the other end zone, it’s a safety for the defense….

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25 minutes ago, GunnerBill said:

 

I agree it is unlikely to change more widely. But I still think that is the best balance of fairness. The rule at the moment over favours the offense everywhere but through the endzone where it over favours the defense . 

 

This is exactly why I think giving possession to the defense at the spot of the fumble when it's out of the end zone makes the most sense. It preserves the field position advantage for the offense.

 

I think the fundamental difference of opinion on this is how folks view "out of bounds" vs. "out of the end zone". IMO they are fundamentally different and  should be treated that way. Others see them as fundamentally the same.

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On 12/14/2023 at 5:22 PM, Realist said:

I would say, play it like an incomplete pass. Ball goes out of the end zone, go back to the original line of scrimmage and next down.

 

I'd say put the ball at the spot it was fumbled.  I'd also change the rule and say that if the offensive team recovers a fumble downfield (i.e. past the LOS), the ball goes back to where it was fumbled.  If they recover it behind the LOS or the defense recovers it, it's where the ball is when recovered.

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On 12/15/2023 at 2:38 PM, SinatraSinger said:

I'll tell you a rule that should change:...............The being able to call fair catch on a kick off and automatically get the ball at the 25 yard line.  I hate that rule.  If you call a fair catch on a punt at the 5 yard line you get the ball at the 5 yard line, not on a kick off it goes to the 25 yard line.  It takes away the strategy of trying to force the other team to return the ball.  It irritates the crap out of me.

 

The rule is in place to discourage kickoffs as much as possible due to the high injury rate on them.  

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On 12/16/2023 at 11:31 PM, Big Turk said:

 

The rule is in place to discourage kickoffs as much as possible due to the high injury rate on them.  

I understand that the NFL is trying to cut down on the injury rate on returns, what I don't understand is the fact they they get the ball out to the 25 yard line.  If ou call a fair catch at the 10 then you get the ball at the 10.

 

Also if they are trying to cut down on injuries why not do the same on Punts.  If the ball is kicked into the end zone on a punt it goes to the 20 yard line, so why not do the same on punts as they do on kick offs.  If you call a fair catch on a punt inside the 20 then it automatically goes to the 20, that would be the same as the kick off rule other then the yard line.   But they don't, so why is a fair catch on the kick off going to the 25 yard line.  I would think that more injuries happen on punt returns then kickoff returns.

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