Why was that nota hold on that WR?

dogfan96

Redshirt
Jun 3, 2007
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it's just that you usually get away with the holding if you keep the hands inside
 

shsdawg

Redshirt
Mar 30, 2010
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period. You usually get away with it if you keep your hands in and don'textend your arms. His arms were extended.
 

AssEndDawg

Freshman
Aug 1, 2007
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You haven't been paying any damn attention the past five years if you don't think so. As long as your hands are inside on the chest, you can hold the jersey. Our receivers do it every single time. It's the same thing on the line. If you hands come outside to the shoulder pad on anywhere near the back you are going to get call. Letter of the law I don't know but it's how the game is being played and I have never seen the refs call a hold with the hands inside on the chest.
 

dogfan96

Redshirt
Jun 3, 2007
2,188
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it was explained to you below.. when you keep your hands inside, you USUALLY don't get called for it.. if your arms extend, you normally DO get called for it.. let a guy hold the jersey with his hands inside and the defender gets his shoulders turned so the guy has to extend his arms and the hold gets exposed.. it gets called (almost) every time
 

dudehead

Senior
Jul 9, 2006
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AssEndDawg said:
you can hold the jersey. That's what he was doing.

My son, a JUCO WR, just said that when blocking he grabs the DB's shoulder pads at the chest every time he can.
 

AssEndDawg

Freshman
Aug 1, 2007
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Where that was called. I've seen the receivers doing the exact same thing we saw in the Auburn game all day. Not a single call. So you feel free to sit there thinking your right but in the real world of football the refs aren't calling what you think is a penalty. So obviously the refs are agreeing with me.
 

AssEndDawg

Freshman
Aug 1, 2007
3,183
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I wasn't arguing the letter of the rule, I'm just saying in the last four years of watching football that it seems to be the standard way to block and I've never seen it called. In fact, I've heard ESPN talk about it several times saying, "as long as you keep your hands inside you are ok, but if they slip to the shoulder you will draw a flag."

I don't doubt the rule book doesn't allow it, but it's how all the receivers are being trained to block and obviously the refs are, as a group, not calling it.
 

patdog

Heisman
May 28, 2007
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Holding is legal as long as you don't extend your arms. Like it or not, that's the way it is and has been for a long time. It may not be the letter of the rule, but it's the way it is.</p>