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The Vandy "trick play", not a football act-----long, but you only need to read the first few

jauk11

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Dec 6, 2006
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paragraphs.

This entire copy and paste is from this question from "Jane" about the "intent to deceive" rule, which has been in force in high school rules for decades, and is apparently has also been in the NCAA rules for a while. It is emphasized in high school, and I assume it is in college, particularly the "using a substitute to deceive" portion.

This is the gist of the rule, taken from the long article below, initiated by Jane's question. This is all you need to read, the rest of the long thread is mostly examples of where it should be applied, and I think some of them are pretty strict interpretations, Vandy's use of the substitutions (I consider all 11 players substitutes even though it was following a timeout) was a clear violation of the rules IMO, this is grade school or playground football.

Not sure about you, but I felt cheated on the play. Here is the excerpt, the "b." part is the relevant part::


"From the 2009 NCAA Football Rule Book:

Unfair Tactics Rule 9-2-2
ARTICLE 2. a. No player shall conceal the ball in or beneath his clothing or equipment or substitute any other article for the ball.
b. No simulated replacements or substitutions may be used to confuse opponents. No tactic associated with substitutes or the substitution process may be used to confuse opponents (Rule 3-5-2-e) (A.R. 9-2-2-IVII).
c. No equipment may be used to confuse opponents (Rule 1-4-2-e).
PENALTY [a-c] 15 yards from the previous spot [S27]. Flagrant offenders shall be disqualified"



Here is the entire long article, with examples at the end:


Question
What is intent to deceive penalty? And isn't that the point of a trick play?

Get the answer below


Answer
Jane
Where there is a tactic by one team that is intended to deceive opponents and confuse opponents, such acts are in violation of the rules. In the Air Force vs. BYU game, the QB had been under center then pulled back and began to walk away from his position and began calling out. This is not a normal or routine act. While the QB did this the snapper snapped the ball to another player. The conduct by the QB was intented to deceive and confuse opponents. This type of non-football act is an unfair tactic. A player who runs a reverse or runs a draw play or some other trickery is done by means of a football playing act. The QB walking away from his normal position is not a football playing act. It is intended to take advantage of the defense who may take their guard down under such a situation. Hence the unfair act. This play is very similar to the play the NCAA warned officials about in the most recent NCAA Bulletin of 11/13/09. Below is a partial copy of the buletin and the NCAA Rules.

"MEMORANDUM
November 13, 2009
TO: Divisions I, II and III Supervisors of Football Officials,
Conference Commissioners and Head Football Coaches.
FROM: Rogers Redding, secretary-rules editor
NCAA Football Rules Committee.
SUBJECT: NCAA Football Clarification and Play Situations Bulletin No. 3.

Enclosed with this memorandum are the third set of play situations for the 2009
season. The committee hopes these examples assist in the understanding of
NCAA Football rules. Each play includes the ruling and a rule reference to assist...

2. Second and 10 at the A-45. Quarterback A12 is in a “shotgun” formation. All players are
stopped for a full second when A12 turns (no false start) and begins to trot toward his
sideline in apparent confusion about what play is to be called or whether the coach wants to
request a timeout. He is moving parallel to his end line and is almost to his sideline when the
ball is snapped to A45 who is five yards behind the snapper. A45 then completes a forward
pass to A12 for a long gain.
RULING: Unsportsmanlike conduct for an unfair act to deceive the opponents. The referee
may impose any penalty he deems reasonable. In this case the penalty is for a live-ball foul,
15 yards at the previous spot and the down is repeated. Second and 25 at the A-30. (9-2-3-c)"


From the 2009 NCAA Football Rule Book:

Unfair Tactics Rule 9-2-2
ARTICLE 2. a. No player shall conceal the ball in or beneath his clothing or equipment or substitute any other article for the ball.
b. No simulated replacements or substitutions may be used to confuse opponents. No tactic associated with substitutes or the substitution process may be used to confuse opponents (Rule 3-5-2-e) (A.R. 9-2-2-IVII).
c. No equipment may be used to confuse opponents (Rule 1-4-2-e).
PENALTY [a-c] 15 yards from the previous spot [S27]. Flagrant offenders shall be disqualified

EXAMPLES of Unfair tactics: Unfair Tactics—ARTICLE 2

Approved Ruling 9-2-2
I. After the ball is ready for play, Team A goes into a formation with two players split wide on both sides of the snapper and two other Team A linemen adjacent to the snapper. No more than four players are legally in the backfield. Team A sends in two substitutes, who take positions on the line of scrimmage adjacent to the two split offensive linemen on the opposite side of the field of play from their team bench. This leaves Team A with nine players on the line of scrimmage and four backfield players all legally in position. Immediately and before the snap, two Team A linemen nearest their team’s bench leave the field of play and are off at the snap. Seven players are on the line of scrimmage, five of whom are Team A linemen numbered 50 to 79. RULING: Penalty—15 yards from the previous spot. This is a simulated replacement of a player to confuse the opponents.

II. On fourth down at Team B’s 12-yard line, A1 enters the field of play with a kicking shoe while his 11 teammates are in the huddle. A1 kneels and measures the distance from the neutral zone to the kicking spot. While his teammates are leaving the huddle, A1 leaves the field
of play with the shoe. Team A quickly runs a play from scrimmage. RULING: Team A foul. Penalty—15 yards from the previous spot. There shall be no simulated replacement of a player to confuse the opponents, and a player who communicates must remain in the game for one down.

III. A1 leaves the field of play during a down. Team A huddles with 10 players. Substitute A12 enters, and A2 simulates leaving the field but sets near the sideline for a “hide-out’’ pass. RULING: Penalty—15 yards from the previous spot. This is a simulated replacement of a player to confuse opponents.

IV. Between scrimmage downs, one or more Team B substitutes enter the field of play. Before the snap for the next down, more than 11 Team B players intentionally stay on the field of play as long as possible (more than three seconds) to disguise the defensive personnel, the type of defense and the pass coverage. RULING: Dead-ball foul on Team B, illegal substitution. Penalty—Five yards from the succeeding spot (Rule 3-5-2-c).

V. While a team is legally set to attempt a field goal, the potential holder for the kick goes toward his team area asking for a shoe. A shoe is thrown on the field and the player, in motion toward his team area, turns toward the goal line. The ball is snapped to the player in the
kicking position, who throws a pass to the player who had turned up field after asking for a shoe. RULING: Penalty—15 yards from the previous spot.

VI. Team A, with 12 players in the vicinity of the huddle (within 10 yards), breaks the huddle and two players start toward the sideline and Team A’s bench. RULING: Dead-ball foul. Penalty—Five yards from the succeeding spot.

VII. Team A is lined up in scrimmage kick formation and has been set for one second. One of the offensive backs shouts to and motions to A40, the blocker on the right wing, to get off the field. At the snap, A40 is in legal motion toward his sideline. A40 turns downfield and
becomes a pass receiver. RULING: Penalty—15 yards from the previous spot. This is a tactic associated with the substitution process to deceive opponents.

Edit: I should probably give credit for the article to Expert: Vic Winnek - 11/23/2009 from AllExperts.
 
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