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Down (gridiron football)

A down marker showing first down along the sideline of a collegiate game

A down is a period in which a play transpires in gridiron football. The down is a distinguishing characteristic of the game compared to other codes of football but is synonymous with the 6 "tackle" rule in rugby league. The team in possession of the football has a limited number of downs (four in American football, three in Canadian football) to advance ten yards or more towards their opponent's goal line. If they fail to advance that far, possession of the ball is turned over to the other team. In most situations if a team reaches their final down, they will punt to their opponent, which forces their opponent to begin their drive from further down the field; if they are in range, they might instead attempt to score a field goal.

Description

A down begins with a snap or free kick (such as a kickoff or safety kick) and ends when the ball or the player in possession of it is declared down by an official, a team scores, or the ball or player in possession of it leaves the field of play.

The player with possession of the ball after he has been tackled or is otherwise unable to advance the ball further on account of the play having ended is down (e.g., "He is down at the 34-yard line").

Down may also refer to the ball after it is made dead in one manner or another. The line of scrimmage for the next play will be determined by the position of the ball when it is down.

Each possession begins with first down. The line to gain is marked 10 yards downfield from the start of this possession, and the situation is described as "1st and 10" (if the goal line is less than 10 yards downfield, then the goal line is the line to gain and the situation is "1st and goal"). If the offensive team moves the ball past the line to gain, they make a new first down. If they fail to do this after a specified number of downs (four in American play and three in Canadian play), the team turns the ball over on downs, and possession of the ball reverts to the opposing team at the spot where the ball was downed at the end of the last down.

If a penalty against the defensive team moves the ball past the line to gain, the offensive team gets a new first down. Some defensive penalties give the offense an automatic first down regardless of the distance.

When the offensive team reaches the final down, the team faces a last down situation (third down situation in Canadian play and fourth down situation in American play), where the team must decide whether to use a running or passing play in an attempt to gain a first down (this is called going for it), or alternatively to kick the ball (either by punting or attempting a field goal). Though statistical analysis of games suggests playing more aggressively is the better option,[citation needed] kicking the ball is typically seen as the safer solution; scrimmaging may lead to a turnover on downs, potentially giving the ball over to the other team with good field position.

Downing the player with possession of the ball is one way to end a play (other ways include the player with the ball going out of bounds, an incomplete pass, or a score). Usually a player is made down when he is tackled by the defense. In the NFL, if the offensive player is touching the ground with some part of his body other than his hands or feet, then he is down if any defensive player touches him. In the NCAA, an offensive player touching the ground in the same manner is down, regardless of whether a defensive player touches him.

If recovering the ball in one's opponent's end zone (following a kickoff in American football, and following any kick into the end zone, except for successful field goals, in Canadian football), a player may down the ball by dropping to one knee (in Canadian play, doing so scores a single for the opposing team). A player in possession of the ball will down the ball if he fumbles it out of bounds. If a quarterback is running with the ball during his initial possession following the snap, he may down the ball by doing a foot-first slide – this is to protect the quarterback from injury. In the NFL, the quarterback is the only player for whom falling down in this way automatically stops play.

Terminology

The situation at a down can be described succinctly in a short phrase of the form 1st/2nd/3rd/4th and X. The first part describes which down the offense is on, and the X is a number of yards between the current line of scrimmage and the line at which the offense would gain another set of downs. Thus, offenses will normally begin on 1st and 10. If they gain 5 yards on the play, the subsequent situation would be described as 2nd and 5.

If the distance to the target line is very small, the number of yards may be replaced by and inches (e.g. 3rd and inches). Colloquially, when the target line is far from the line of scrimmage, the term "and long" may be used (e.g. 3rd and long).

When the offense has a first down within 10 yards of the goal line, the goal line becomes the line to gain as they cannot make another first down (barring a defensive penalty) without actually scoring. In these situations the number of yards is replaced with and goal, e.g. 1st and goal.

Other downs-related terminology is as follows:

Derivation

In modern rugby union football, teams have unlimited possession of the ball after a tackle usually a ruck will form.

In modern rugby league football, each team has six tackles to score. If they fail then possession changes over to the other team. The rule was established at four tackles in 1966 and was changed to six tackles at different times in different countries.

In American football, the concept of the act of having the ball down gave rise to "down" as the condition of the player so obligated, and the ball carrier could call for a "down" voluntarily. Although NCAA rules have effectively abolished this (as the ball carrier dropping to the ground immediately ends the play), other codes for North American football, such as the NFL, still allow (as one way for the ball to become dead) for the runner to cry "down".

Eventually the rules officially applied the word to include all of the action from the time the ball was put into play (whether by snap or free kick) until it became dead. However, in some contexts the down begins when the ball is made ready for play by the officials.

Система даунов, предполагающая определенное количество игр для продвижения мяча на определенное количество ярдов, была введена Межвузовской футбольной ассоциацией в 1882 году. (Тогдашний игрок Уолтер Кэмп , будучи секретарем комитета по правилам, записал это изменение. , но не способствовал этому.) Это позволяло команде за три дауна продвинуть мяч на пять ярдов или отступить с ним на десять ярдов, или же потерять владение мячом - предложение, направленное на уменьшение количества мешков с песком . В начале 20-го века, после того как в игру был добавлен пас вперед , необходимое продвижение было увеличено вдвое до десяти ярдов, а позже к серии был добавлен четвертый даун; Тем временем альтернатива отступления с мячом на расстояние удвоила требование до двадцати ярдов и позже была отменена. Система трех даунов была введена в канадский футбол примерно в 1900 году в некоторых провинциальных правилах, поскольку игра еще не была стандартизирована по всей стране.

Два/три и выход

Три и аут — это ситуация в американском футболе , в которой команда, начав атакующее владение мячом, выполняет три игры, не может выполнить первый даун, а затем наносит панты.

Этот термин взят из стандартной практики, согласно которой нападающее подразделение имеет только три «настоящих» игры, прежде чем ему предстоит нанести удар. Хотя теоретически команде разрешена четвертая игра с разбегом или пасом, использование четвертого дауна для пробежки или паса в большинстве случаев является рискованным шагом. Если им не удается получить новый первый даун в игре с четвертым дауном, команда противника захватывает мяч с того места, где они остановились, что дает им лучшую позицию на поле, чем если бы мяч был отправлен дальше в сторону зачетной зоны противоположной команды. Как правило, команда бежит или пасует на четвертом дауне только в том случае, если она отстает в близкой игре, находится достаточно близко к первому маркеру дауна (обычно ярд или меньше) и находится на территории противоположной команды или в определенной части поля. поле, где удар с игры, скорее всего, приведет к тачбэку (что приведет к относительно ограниченному чистому приросту в ярдах), но сразу за пределами дистанции, на которой бросок с игры может оказаться успешным (в НФЛ пропущенный бросок с игры приводит к соперник овладел мячом в месте неудачного удара) – расстояние, на котором тренеры по американскому футболу обычно пытаются реализовать четвертые дауны там, где в противном случае они не стали бы, варьируется между 30- и 45-ярдовыми линиями соперника, в зависимости от таких факторов, как предполагаемые способности кикера или игрока и необходимое расстояние для выигрыша.

Punting following a three-and-out is unlike a turnover on downs. Punting after a three-and-out allows a team the opportunity to set their opposition farther back in field position. On a turnover on downs, there is no punt and the opposing team takes over possession of the ball at the spot of field where the final (third in the Canadian game, fourth in the American game) down ended.

In Canadian football, since there are three downs, the term "two and out" is used in this situation. In the Canadian game, single points can be scored on punts and missed field goals. As a result, Canadian football coaches will never "go for it" simply on account of the ball being on the edge of field goal range – barring extraordinary circumstances (such as trailing by between four and eight points late in the game), teams facing third and relatively long at the edge of field goal range will typically either punt (typically with the intent of putting the ball out of bounds near the opposing goal line as opposed to actually scoring a single point) or attempt a field goal.

References

  1. ^ "Jerusalem Lions win Israel Bowl X in overtime thriller". American Football International. 2017-04-03. Retrieved 2018-08-28. After 3 incompletions and facing 4th-and-game
  2. ^ "Asked and Answered: Dec. 14". steelers.com. 2017-12-13. Retrieved 2023-11-14. A possession down is a down upon which continued possession of the football is at stake. Third downs, in a situation where if the offense doesn't convert it would punt. Fourth downs, in all situations.

See also