1 / 10

OCEP PLAYOFF CERTIFICATION TRAINING ISSUES FOR THE REFEREE ROUGHING THE PASSER

OCEP PLAYOFF CERTIFICATION TRAINING ISSUES FOR THE REFEREE ROUGHING THE PASSER. GUIDELINES. PROTECTING THE PASSER IS ONE OF THE REFEREE’S MAIN JOBS. IF THERE IS ANY QUESTION WHETHER THE ACTION ON THE PASSER IS A FOUL, LEAN TO THE SIDE OF PROTECTION AND CALL ROUGHING THE PASSER (RPS.)

knoxr
Télécharger la présentation

OCEP PLAYOFF CERTIFICATION TRAINING ISSUES FOR THE REFEREE ROUGHING THE PASSER

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OCEP PLAYOFF CERTIFICATION TRAINING ISSUES FOR THE REFEREE ROUGHING THE PASSER

  2. GUIDELINES PROTECTING THE PASSER IS ONE OF THE REFEREE’S MAIN JOBS. IF THERE IS ANY QUESTION WHETHER THE ACTION ON THE PASSER IS A FOUL, LEAN TO THE SIDE OF PROTECTION AND CALL ROUGHING THE PASSER (RPS.) REMEMBER, THE PASSER MAY NOT ALWAYS BE THE QB.

  3. GUIDELINES RPS RULES ONLY APPLY ON LEGAL FORWARD PASSES, THROWN FROM IN OR BEHIND THE NEUTRAL ZONE. (9-4-4) IF THE PASSER IS HIT LATE AFTER HE RELEASES THE BALL WHEN HE IS BEYOND THE LINE OF SCRIMMAGE, IT MAY BE A PERSONAL FOUL BUT IT CANNOT BE ROUGHING.

  4. GUIDELINES ALTHOUGH NOT STATED BY RULE, AS A GUIDELINE, THE DEFENSE MAY ONLY TAKE ONE STEP AND THEN HIT THE PASSER AFTER HE HAS RELEASED THE BALL. HOWEVER, IF AFTER THE BALL HAS CLEARLY BEEN THROWN, THE DEFENDER IS WITHIN ONE STEP AND PUTS HIS HANDS ON THE PASSER, AND FLEXES HIS ARMS, PUSHING THE PASSER TO THE GROUND, THEN RPS SHOULD BE CALLED.

  5. GUIDELINES DO NOT ALLOW A DEFENDER TO COMMIT PUNISHING ACTS SUCH AS “STUFFING” A PASSER INTO THE GROUND OR UNNECESSARILY WRESTLING OR DRIVING HIM DOWN AFTER HE HAS THROWN THE BALL.

  6. GUIDELINES WHEN A DEFENDER GOES HIGH NEAR THE PASSER’S HEAD TO PUNISH HIM, RPS SHOULD BE CALLED ESPECIALLY IF HE LAUNCHES. THE ONLY ACCEPTABLE CONTACT WITH A PASSER IS A NORMAL TACKLING MOTION.

  7. GUIDELINES RPS SHOULD BE CALLED IF THE DEFENSE CONTACTS THE HEAD, FACE, OR NECK AREA OF THE PASSER WITH THE HELMET, HAND OR ARM AFTER THE BALL HAS BEEN RELEASED. IF THE PASSER GETS SACKED AND AN ARM IS AROUND HIS HEAD, IT IS NOT A FOUL UNLESS IT WAS A PERSONAL FOUL

  8. GUIDELINES A DEFENSIVE PLAYER MAY NOT HIT THE PASSER WITH HIS MASK IN THE PASSER’S HEAD OR MASK, NOR MAY HE DRIVE THE CROWN OF HIS HELMET INTO ANY PART OF THE PASSER’S BODY. IF THE PASSER DUCKS AS HE SEES THE DEFENDER COMING AND IS HIT IN THE HEAD IT IS RPS. THE DEFENDER IS RESPONSIBLE TO AVOID THE HEAD OF THE PASSER.

  9. GUIDELINES IF THE POTENTIAL PASSER TUCKS THE BALL INTO HIS BODY AND RUNS, HE REMAINS A RUNNER AND CAN BE HIT LEGALLY LIKE ANY OTHER RUNNER. (2-32-13)

  10. GUIDELINES THERE IS NO FOUL FOR RPS IF A DEFENDER IS BLOCKED BY AN OFFENSIVE PLAYER WITH SUCH FORCE THAT HE CANNOT AVOID CONTACTING THE PASSER. THIS DOES NOT RELIEVE THE DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR PERSONAL FOULS.

More Related