How come "the ground can't cause a fumble" if you are a runner, but you have to "survive the ground" as a receiver?
How come "the ground can't cause a fumble" if you are a runner, but you have to "survive the ground" as a receiver?
As a runner you have already established control of the ball and are in clear possession, therefore the ground can't cause a fumble and you are down.
As a receiver you have to establish control of the ball first. They wrote into the rule that when trying to establish control and going to the ground you must maintain control throughout the process ie through the ground.
That's my take of the rules.
Agree with u, he made catch, made play (ran with possession ), got tackled, brought to ground, knee down, ball then stripped after knee hit ground, not ball hitting turf. Then player stripped ball...I am not sure what part of this means it is not a catch.
No dog in the fight here other than a general disdain for the way this rule is enforced/not enforced.
How come "the ground can't cause a fumble" if you are a runner, but you have to "survive the ground" as a receiver?
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