BS penalty. Int. grounding on Jameis. (1 Viewer)

because intentional grounding incurs a loss of down, as happened to jameis (and mahomes)
That just means you don’t get to replay the down like most penalties. If you hold on 2nd down, you replay 2nd down from 10 yards back. If you intentional ground on 2nd down, you lose the down and now its 3rd.
 
Regardless of whether the penalty is appropriate or not, the punishment does not fit the crime. On a 'normal' intentional grounding the crime is to avoid a sack unfairly and the penalty - 10 yards and loss of down - reflects what you tried to gain by committing the foul.

In the scenario in question, is a 10 yard loss and loss of down commensurate with crime of trying to stop the clock when it was not possible to do so? Seems very much a procedural issue and should be a 5 yard penalty and no loss of down.

It feels like they took two separate scenarios because they both involve a QB throwing the ball away and just haven't bothered to split a single penalty up to reflect two different things.
 
Regardless of whether the penalty is appropriate or not, the punishment does not fit the crime. On a 'normal' intentional grounding the crime is to avoid a sack unfairly and the penalty - 10 yards and loss of down - reflects what you tried to gain by committing the foul.

In the scenario in question, is a 10 yard loss and loss of down commensurate with crime of trying to stop the clock when it was not possible to do so? Seems very much a procedural issue and should be a 5 yard penalty and no loss of down.

It feels like they took two separate scenarios because they both involve a QB throwing the ball away and just haven't bothered to split a single penalty up to reflect two different things.
The ruling in the book explains the rationale. I'm not saying I agree with it, but it's right there.

The scenario they propose is 6 seconds remaining in the half with a stopped clock. The QB spikes the ball, which runs 1 second off the clock. Now, a field goal try should run the clock out without the other team getting the ball back with 1 second.

The interesting part is that the ruling states that the penalty is intentional ground, with a 10 yard penalty, a loss of down, and a 10 second runoff. The runoff was not included in this instance as it should have been.
 
The ruling in the book explains the rationale. I'm not saying I agree with it, but it's right there.

The scenario they propose is 6 seconds remaining in the half with a stopped clock. The QB spikes the ball, which runs 1 second off the clock. Now, a field goal try should run the clock out without the other team getting the ball back with 1 second.

The interesting part is that the ruling states that the penalty is intentional ground, with a 10 yard penalty, a loss of down, and a 10 second runoff. The runoff was not included in this instance as it should have been.
Not disagreeing about what's in the rulebook, just stating it seems like the same penalty for two different things.

In the scenario referenced, throw the flag, put the second back on the clock, 5 yard penalty - job done.
 

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