American football foul
In
American football
, an
unfair act
is a
foul
that can be called when a player or team commits a flagrant and obviously illegal act that has a major impact on the game, and from which, if additional penalties were not enforced, the offending team would gain an advantage.
All of the major American football codes include some form of unfair act rule. In all cases, the definition is deliberately vague, giving the
officials
great latitude in defining such an act and enforcing
penalties
for such acts. At the high school level, officials are free to assess any penalty they see fit, up to and including
forfeiture
of the game. The
National Federation of State High School Associations
, however, also includes the general rule that all acts are legal unless otherwise explicitly stated; thus, the unfair act rule is only invoked in cases when specific rules have clearly been broken, but the penalty for the foul does not cancel the advantage gained by committing the foul.
The
National Football League
defines two types of unfair acts, a
palpably unfair act
and an
extraordinarily unfair act
. For the former, the general rule is that "palpably unfair" acts interfere illegally with the course of play, be it from player or non-player action, and the compensation must be, in the judgment of the officials, "equitable" to what the result of the play would have been without the act happening.
[1]
In the event of an ongoing threat, such as a
riot
in the stands, the officials can also suspend the game until the situation is resolved.
[1]
The extraordinarily unfair act rule is for acts so extraordinary that the
NFL Commissioner
can levy fines, require the offending team to surrender draft picks, and suspend players. Under Rule 17 of the NFL rulebook, the commissioner also has the authority to overturn a game result (that is, order a
forfeit loss
to the offending team and a
walkover win
for the wronged team), order the game to be
fully replayed
, or to discard the results of the game from the unfair act onward and resume play from immediately before that point. In the last case, the game can only be resumed in progress within 48 hours of the unfair act or other disaster;
[2]
otherwise, the game must be replayed from the beginning. To date, no commissioner has ever used his authority to alter a game result.
[3]
Examples
[
edit
]
An early example of an unfair act (though such a rule was not yet codified) occurred on November 23, 1918, when
Navy
faced the powerful
Great Lakes NTS
team. With Navy leading 6-0, the Midshipmen's captain
Bill Ingram
fumbled the ball, resulting in Harry Lawrence Eielson, of Great Lakes, picking up the ball and running it most of the way back down the field. However, before Eielson could cross the goal line, Saunders, a substitute for Navy, leapt up off the bench and tackled him, later claiming "an impulse [had] seized him and that made him forget everything" (though some claimed Navy's coach
Gil Dobie
directed Saunders to make the tackle). The referees reacted by awarding Great Lakes a touchdown, and placed the ball for the goal kick (which at that time was determined in a rugby-styled manner based on where the runner crossed the goal line) in the center of the goal posts, allowing Great Lakes to make an easy goal kick to win the game. Though the rules of the time did not allow for the awarding of points in this manner, "Every one [sic] admits that Great Lakes had to be awarded a touchdown," with the referee acting "upon general principles, rather than a specific rule".
[4]
The
1954 Cotton Bowl Classic
featured a notorious use of the rule.
Rice University
's
Dicky Moegle
broke free for an apparent touchdown run, but
Alabama's
Tommy Lewis
entered the field and tackled Moegle. This could have been ruled
illegal participation
, for which the penalty then was 5 yards. However, the officials declared a palpably unfair act and credited the touchdown anyway.
[5]
Modern college and NFL officials are explicitly permitted to award a touchdown under such circumstances.
[6]
The high school rulebook specifies one situation to be penalized as an unfair act: when the defensive team makes repeated fouls near its own
goal line
, for which the regular penalty (advancing the ball half the distance to the goal) is trivial.
[
citation needed
]
In 2022, the NFL threatened to use the unfair act clause against the
Buffalo Bills
when fans at
Highmark Stadium
bombarded the field with snowballs during a December 17 game against the
Miami Dolphins
. Because referee
Bill Vinovich
arbitrarily threatened a 15-yard
unsportsmanlike conduct
penalty if the snowball throwing continued,
The Buffalo News
argued, based on a precedent following a similar situation in 1985 between the
San Francisco 49ers
and
Denver Broncos
, that Vinovich had acted outside the bounds of the NFL rulebook when making the threat.
[1]
Deliberate fouls in the NFL
[
edit
]
The NFL's rule on deliberate fouls is open-ended but covers only "successive or repeated fouls to prevent a score."
[7]
It would only be a palpably unfair act for the defense to commit deliberate fouls, preferring the certainty of a small penalty over the uncertainty of a score attempt, if the defense did so again after an official's warning.
[6]
On November 6, 2016, near the end of the first half, the
San Francisco 49ers
deliberately held pass receivers, forcing the
New Orleans Saints
to settle for a short field goal. The NFL instructed its officials that this would be a palpably unfair act subject to a 15-yard penalty if repeated.
[8]
On November 27, 2016, the
Baltimore Ravens
took a
safety
, conceding 2 points of their 7-point lead. They committed numerous holding fouls on the same play to ensure that they could exhaust the final 11 seconds of the game. This was not a palpably unfair act because it did not recur.
[9]
The
Snowplow Game
on December 12, 1982, had only one score, a field goal during a snowstorm by the hosting
New England Patriots
. Before the score, the grounds crew plowed a special path for the
placekicker
to make the kick easier. The game officials allowed this act, but
Miami Dolphins
coach
Don Shula
protested to Commissioner
Pete Rozelle
that it constituted an unfair act and thus could be overturned. Rozelle, although he agreed the act was unfair and could in theory be punished, refused on principle to ever overturn a game result.
[10]
On a key drive late in the
2018 NFC Championship Game
,
Nickell Robey-Coleman
of the
Los Angeles Rams
made a helmet-to-helmet hit that constituted pass interference. The officials called neither foul, and the Rams ultimately beat the
New Orleans Saints
in overtime. A lawsuit from Saints fans sought to force the league to use its unfair act clause and replay at least a portion of the game. The league opposed this on financial grounds, claiming it would have to postpone the Super Bowl to do so, and ultimately the court ruled in the league's favor, ruling that fans had no
standing
to sue over rules enforcement.
[11]
Robey-Coleman was later fined for the hit.
Beginning in the
2017 NFL season
, deliberately committing fouls to manipulate the game clock was classified as
unsportsmanlike conduct
.
[12]
In the first test of the rule, on October 21, 2019, it went unenforced, as the
New England Patriots
committed repeated dead-ball penalties (which their opponent
New York Jets
declined) and ran out the clock without being penalized.
[13]
This was subsequently repeated by the Tennessee Titans that same season in their wild card playoff win over the New England Patriots. Former New England Patriot player and Tennessee Titan head coach,
Mike Vrabel
, had his team commit various penalties to run 50 seconds off the clock in the final quarter of the game.
See also
[
edit
]
- Professional foul
, the equivalent foul in other codes of football
- Awarded goal
, a similar situation in ice hockey
- Committing deliberate
personal fouls
in basketball
- Hack-a-Shaq
, a now-discouraged deliberate-fouling strategy in basketball that purposely targeted poor free throw shooters regardless of whether they had the ball or not
References
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
Skurski, Jay (December 19, 2022).
"15 yards for snowballs? Turns out, that's not covered in the NFL rule book"
.
Buffalo News
.
Archived
from the original on 2022-12-20
. Retrieved
2022-12-20
.
- ^
Wilson, Josh (2023-01-03).
"NFL insider reveals options league is considering for Bengals-Bills resumption"
.
FanSided
. Retrieved
2023-01-03
.
- ^
Florio, Mike (January 21, 2019).
"Commissioner has authority to take action over Rams-Saints outcome, in theory"
. MSN. Archived from
the original
on Jan 22, 2019
. Retrieved
January 21,
2019
.
- ^
"Unusual Play Explained"
.
New York Times
. 1 December 1918.
Archived
from the original on 10 August 2022
. Retrieved
10 August
2022
– via newspapers.com.
- ^
Watkins, Ed (January 2, 1954).
"Rice beats Alabama 28?6, Moegle is Star"
.
The Tuscaloosa News
. p. 1
. Retrieved
January 3,
2011
– via Google News.
- ^
a
b
The definition in the
2016 NFL Rulebook
is within Rule 12, Section 3 ("Unsportsmanlike Conduct"). Article 2 addresses "successive or repeated fouls" and Article 3 addresses unfairly interfering with play.
- ^
Kevin Seifert (2016-10-18).
"How the NFL prevents teams from using penalties to win games"
. ESPN
. Retrieved
2017-01-06
.
- ^
Matt Maiocco (2016-11-15).
"NFL Acts Against 49ers' Holding Strategy"
. NBC
. Retrieved
2017-01-06
.
- ^
Brian Tinsman (2016-11-27).
"Ravens' Take Safety Play Wasn't a 'Palpably Unfair Act'
"
. CBS
. Retrieved
2017-01-06
.
- ^
"NFL Top 10: Bad Weather Games", produced by NFL Network
- ^
Dedaj, Paulina (January 25, 2019).
"NFL opposes Rams-Saints do-over, saying it could cost league more than $100M: court filing"
.
Fox News
. Retrieved
January 26,
2019
.
- ^
Patra, Kevin (March 28, 2017).
"NFL passes no leaping rule, approves ban for head hits"
.
NFL.com
. Archived from
the original
on March 28, 2017
. Retrieved
March 28,
2017
.
- ^
Dan Gartland (2019-10-22).
"Bill Belichick Used a Blowout Over the Jets to Expose a Weird Loophole"
. Sports Illustrated.
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5-yard penalties
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10-yard penalties
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15-yard penalties
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