passing study guide 8/12/03 handouts section colorado springs football officials association

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Passing Study Guide 8/12/03 www.eteamz.com/csfoa Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

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Page 1: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Passing Study Guide

8/12/03

www.eteamz.com/csfoa

Handouts section

Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Page 2: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Pre-Season• study Rules Book

– definitions covered in Rule 2 (page 17)– passing rules covered in Rule 7 (page 46)– momentum exception Rule 8-5-2 (page 54)– conduct of players Rule 9 (page 55)– passing fundamentals covered in Section VII (page 67)

• study Case Book• study Simplified and Illustrated book• study Mechanics• exercise - stretching and cardiovascular

Page 3: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Definitions• loose ball (page 17)• batting (page 17)• catch (page 18)• force (page 20)• forward progress (page 21)• interception (page 23)• muff (page 25)• passing (page 29)• player designations (page 26)• plays for penalty enforcement (page 27)

Page 4: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Rule 9

• holding (9-2-3 page 55)

• illegal blocking (9-3-1 page 56)

• illegal personal contact (9-4-3 page 57)

• noncontact unsportsmanlike (9-5 page 57)

• illegal participation (9-6 page 58)

Page 5: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Case Book• Catching The Ball (page 13)• Simultaneous Catch (page 14)• Force (page 17)• Forward Progress Airborne (page 17)• Pass or Fumble (page 19)• Passing the Ball (pages 49 - 55)• Momentum Exception (pages 58 -59)

Page 6: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Case Book• Blocking - Use of Hands (page 62)• Roughing the Passer (page 65)• Noncontact Unsportsmanlike Conduct (page 68)• Illegal Participation (pages 69 - 70)

Page 7: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Simplified and Illustrated• Catch (2-4-1 page 18)• Force (2-13-1 page 14)• Forward Progress Airborne (2-15-2 pages 22 - 23)• Passing (2-29-2 page 26)• Passing the Ball (pages 57 - 64)• Momentum Exception (pages 67 - 68; 70)• Holding/Pass Interference (9-2-3 page 72) • Roughing the Passer (9-4-3 pages 77 - 78)• Taunting (9-5-1 page 80)• Illegal Participation (9-6-1 & 9-6-4 page 81)

Page 8: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

True/False Quiz

• If the number exception is in effect, A1 (#21) can be one of the 5 interior linemen, but is restricted the same as other players wearing a number 50 - 79.

• True (7-2-5a Exception)

• A pass thrown forward after a change of possession during the down is an illegal forward pass.

• True (7-5-2a)

• Touching of a forward pass by B causes all A players to become eligible.

• True (7-5-6b)

Page 9: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

True/False Quiz

• If end A1 accidentally goes out of bounds and returns during the down, he becomes an ineligible receiver.

• False (7-5-6d)

• If more than one forward pass is thrown, interference restrictions end for B when the first pass is touched.

• True (7-5-9c)

• If A1’s forward pass is deflected by eligible A2 to ineligible A3 behind the neutral zone and A3 catches it, there is no foul.

• False (7-5-13 - Illegal Touching 5 yds + loss of down)

Page 10: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Plays & Rulings• A14 releases a forward pass when his passing hand is beyond the

neutral zone and the rest of his body is not beyond the neutral zone.• Legal play. A passer has crossed the neutral zone when either foot is

beyond the neutral zone when the pass is released.• A's quarterback runs beyond the neutral zone, retreats behind the neutral

zone and throws a forward pass from his 40 yard line. B37 contacts eligible A86 who catches the pass and runs for an apparent touchdown.

• The pass is legal and pass interference rules apply.• At the snap, A36 is positioned so that he is neither on the line nor in the

backfield. He runs a down-and-out pattern and catches a legal forward pass for a 10-yard gain.

• Team A has committed three fouls: illegal formation, ineligible receiver downfield, and offensive pass interference. The latter includes loss of down.

Page 11: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Plays & Rulings• Eligible receiver A88 pushes linebacker B56 five yards beyond

the neutral zone. A10's pass is well over the head of A88 and lands out of bounds.

• A88 is guilty of offensive pass interference. The fact that the pass was uncatchable does not affect this ruling.

• Quarterback A19, in his end zone, is unable to find an open receiver. Under a heavy rush he throws the ball away. His forward pass hits lineman A71 in the back, also in his end zone, and falls incomplete.

• Because A71 did not bat, muff or catch the ball, there is no foul for A71 being touched by the ball. The only foul is for intentional grounding. In this case, acceptance of the penalty results in a safety as does the result of the play, since the run ended in the end zone.

Page 12: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Plays & Rulings• K punts from their own 5-yard line. R33 muffs the short

kick at K's 25-yard line and the ball rebounds back to K's goal line where K7 recovers. From K's 2-yard line, K7 throws a forward pass to A88 near A's 35 yard line, where A88 is flagged for offensive pass interference.

• The pass is legal, as it occurred before any change in team possession and was thrown from behind the line. K will keep possession of the ball and will be awarded a new series, as R was the first to touch the kick beyond the line. The basic spot is the 5-yard line. Penalize half the distance to the goal . K's ball, first and 10, on their own 2.5 yard line.

Page 13: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Basic Mechanics - Referee• Position is behind and about 5 - 7 yards outside the deepest

back or backs.  Work on the throwing arm side of the quarterback. Stay behind and aside from passer - be deep enough and wide enough to be able to "see through" the passer, observing the blocking in and around the pocket.

• Observe backs illegally blocking below the waist; observe that backs and lineman are not clipping or holding rushing defensive lineman.

• Assist U with blocking on the tackle on your side.• Do not release coverage too quickly - remain focused on the

passer after the throw and observe action around the passer.

Page 14: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Basic Mechanics - Umpire• Step up to neutral zone expanded and watch interior

linemen, making sure no lineman passes you prior to last forward pass being thrown.

• On rollout passes, step forward to line of scrimmage and turn to passer to assist R on ruling on illegal forward pass.

• Observe backs illegally blocking below waist or clipping rushing defensive lineman. 

• Assist L and LJ on coverage of short passes over the middle. Turn and look. If you are certain that the pass is incomplete, give the incompletion signal.

Page 15: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Basic Mechanics - Back Judge• Responsible to cover deepest receiver on the play and does not let any

player to get behind him. • Key on tight end or end on strong side. If formation is balanced, key on

end on side of LJ. Watch that the receiver is not held attempting to move downfield and that the receiver is not illegally blocking or clipping defensive players (especially linebackers).

• Be ready to rule on all passes at the end line and the goal line. • When ball is thrown, watch for interference by either team; on passes

between you and sideline, box the play in, officiating from inside out and assisting side official in determining if there is a catch, incompletion, fumble, or any player foul. 

• If ball is intercepted inside of the 5 yard line, be ready to rule whether there is a momentum exception if interceptor is downed in his end zone. Drop a bean bag at spot of on all interceptions inside the 5 yard line.

Page 16: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Basic Mechanics - Wings• Read through the end on your side to read the initial actions of the

lineman.• Responsible for the entire sideline to both end lines.  • Observe action on receivers and linebackers to your side - that the

receiver is not held attempting to move downfield and that the receiver is not illegally blocking or clipping defensive players (especially linebackers).

• Assist R on ruling direction of the pass by extending and holding arm towards backfield on any quick sideline passes that are backwards. 

• Officiate from the outside in. Do not let pass receivers get between you and the sideline. On passes thrown between you and BJ, box the play in, assisting the BJ in determining if there is a catch, incompletion, fumble, or any player foul.

Page 17: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Basic Mechanics - Wings• Responsible to cover your one-half of field from line of

scrimmage to area in front of BJ. Be prepared to rule on short passes to receivers running crossing patterns or to backs running pass routes through the middle of the line of scrimmage.

• Be prepared to adjust your coverage if the potential passer becomes a runner.  

• If you are unsure of the status of a completed pass near the line of scrimmage and you observe pass interference, flag the penalty and after the down has ended, advise the R to confer with the U to ascertain if the reception was beyond the line.

Page 18: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Pre-Game• initial coverage based on formations

• who determines initial direction of pass

• how will the direction of the pass be communicated

• who determines if pass is tipped

• how will a tipped pass be communicated

• who determines if pass was thrown beyond the neutral zone

• who determines intentional grounding

Page 19: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Pre-Game• when can A block beyond neutral zone

• when do pass restrictions begin/end for A

• when do pass restrictions begin/end for B

• numbering exception

• sideline, end line, and goal line coverage

• signals between wings and BJ

• when in doubt

Page 20: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

When In Doubt• the pass was trapped rather than caught• the pass is incomplete rather than a fumble• the passer has thrown a forward pass rather than fumbled• the pass is forward rather than backward behind the neutral zone• the pass is backward rather than forward beyond the neutral zone• the passer has not intentionally grounded the ball• the defensive back has legally initiated contact in passing situations• the receiver would have come down inbounds• the pass was released behind the neutral zone rather than beyond• the player has not touched rather than touched the ball (pass or

kick)

Page 21: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Post Pre-Game• pre-game ball boys• right-handed or left-handed QB• types of formations and/or shifts• types of routes• get to know the wide-outs and defensive backs• share the information

Page 22: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Final Thoughts• expect the unexpected

• referee is responsible for watching the passer

• was it holding or pass interference (OPI vs DPI)

• keep a cushion

• read feet then ball

• sell the call

• whistle first then signal

• be still when making the call and/or giving a signal

Page 23: Passing Study Guide 8/12/03  Handouts section Colorado Springs Football Officials Association

Final Thoughts• know the line-to-gain

• “welk” in the side zones

• use an extra ball to mark forward progress in the side zones

• confirm multiply flags then report

• keep the ball/flag company

• don’t let the ball hit the deck

• communicate with the players and coaches

• the game belongs to the kids