From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In
gridiron football
, a
touchdown pass
is a
pass
thrown from the passer (usually the
quarterback
) to a
receiver
that results in a
touchdown
being scored. The pass can either be caught in the
end zone
itself, resulting in an immediate touchdown, or in the field of play, followed by the receiver carrying the ball into the endzone himself for the score. Either way, the quarterback is credited in his statistics with the touchdown pass.
The term "touchdown pass" is mostly used for statistical purposes for the quarterback. The statistic is considered to be highly prestigious among quarterbacks, and is one of the four factors in determining the
passer rating
.
In the game, the effect is simply the scoring of a touchdown (6 points). When a touchdown is achieved by running, the quarterback is not credited with a touchdown pass.
See also
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References
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