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oversleepingprize

You guys see that. He’s still in bounds and prevents the ball from touching the ground. That is the definition of surviving the ground. Not that harbor shit earlier.
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Anonymous 2w

I think in bounds is the difference. Harbor had two feet in bounds. I think if it wasn’t in the endzone, it would’ve been a catch

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 2w

I agree with the in bounds but both are falling to the ground. When you are falling and end up out of bounds you can’t lose control at all. When you’re in the middle of the field you just have to prevent it from touching the ground.

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Anonymous replying to -> oversleepingprize 2w

That’s true so idek. It’s just confusing because when you run the ball, all you have to do is break the plane. I do think the end zone has different rules (like fumbling through it is a touchback)

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 2w

I like the endzone rules. Just breaking the plane makes sense on a run/ catch and run because possession is pre-established on the handoff or at the snap/ catch point outside of the endzone. When possession is to be gained in the endzone you need all the stops. Especially w modern defensive rules. Like you have to give the db a legit chance to break it up.

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