CASE
REPORTS - Pick Play
THE MYSTERIOUS PICK PLAY by Ken Green, President, CFOA
The offensive unit revels in the success of their pass offense established on well executed pick plays.
The defensive coach screams foul
claiming the offense is picking his defensive backs. Meanwhile the
rule book has no
specific reference whatsoever to this so-called pick.
Basically, the pick
play is an offensive tactic whereby an eligible receiver attempts to establish
a position or direction
which prevents the defensive player from obtaining coverage of a second eligible
receiver.
Thus the basic issue is one of whether
or not the play constitutes pass interference. To establish this we must look
at the
various components of pass interference.
---- while the ball is in the air, no contact is permissible ----
Firstly then, there must be contact
involved, and such contact must have been initiated after the ball has been
thrown if
the play is to be illegal.
---- defensive players have equal right to the path of the ball as eligible O players
Secondly, since both sides have
equal right to the path of the ball, the question then becomes who is interfering
with
whom. To clarify this situation, let us refer to the following case:
Play:
On a pass play, receiver O1 starts to run a pass play straight down the field.
Defender D1 backs up in front of
O1 for about 10 yards and then stops directly in the path of O1 so that contact
results.
Ruling:
Each player is entitled to their position on the field provided that they take
it in sufficient time to allow another
player who is moving towards that position or in that path to stop or change
direction without contact.
If D1 stops in the path of O1 so
quickly that O1 has no chance to stop (e.g. within one yard), then D1 is guilty
of
interference if contact occurs.
If D1 stops in the path of O1 so
that O1 could stop if they knew D1 was there (e.g. within 2-3 steps), the onus
of
the responsibility is on O1. The offensive player must expect to be closely
guarded and be aware of such tactics.
Let us take another illustration.
Play:
Eligible receivers O2 and O3 start downfield about two yards apart running parallel
to one another. Defensive
backs D2 and D3 drop back with them. On the O45 O2 suddenly stops and
stands still with D2 closely covering.
O3 immediately cuts to the left at the O44 and D3 trying to cover O3,
runs into O2 after three steps.
Ruling: O2 allowed D3 sufficient time (3 steps) to adjust and thus O2s actions are legal no foul has occurred.
In an attempt to draw conclusions, the following factors must be considered.
(A) Who established the position or direction first?
(B) Who was responsible for the contact? (i.e. Was sufficient distance/time allowed for the opponent to adjust?)
(C) The rule of thumb by which officials
rule, requires the person first in position to allow the opponent 2 or 3 feet
to adjust.
Hopefully, the preceding explanation
will to some extent remove the mystery involved in pick plays. If
players,
coaches and officials are operating on the same basic concepts, hopefully the
disagreement in the interpretation
will be somewhat alleviated.
At the minor and high school levels
it is most beneficial for all concerned to initiate coach/official rules discussion
sessions prior to the season. This will most certainly allow for mutual understanding
of plays similar to those
discussed in the above, and ultimately lead to better rapport throughout the
season.