PER SB Nation (posted by Neal):
"On fourth down before a change of team possession, when a Team A fumble is caught or recovered by a Team A player other than the fumbler, the ball is dead. If the catch or recovery is beyond the spot of the fumble, the ball is returned to the spot of the fumble. If the catch or recovery is behind the spot of the fumble, the ball remains at the spot of the catch or recovery."
Everybody gets this right? Okay, they are saying the tight end's transfer of the ball (to the running back) was a pass, not a fumble. But it was first batted by #70 for Arkansas before the running back picked it up and should have at that point been ruled a fumble (and not advanced):
Rule 2-11-1 "To fumble the ball is to lose player possession by any act other than passing, kicking or successful handing. The status of the ball is a fumble." (You can argue the tight end was passing the ball backward, but #70 was not passing the ball to the running back.)
The ball stopped being a pass when #70 batted the ball and it hit the ground before the running back picked it up.
The question is not whether the tight end fumbled or made a backwards pass. The question is what do you call what #70 did. (It sure wasn't a backwards pass.)
"On fourth down before a change of team possession, when a Team A fumble is caught or recovered by a Team A player other than the fumbler, the ball is dead. If the catch or recovery is beyond the spot of the fumble, the ball is returned to the spot of the fumble. If the catch or recovery is behind the spot of the fumble, the ball remains at the spot of the catch or recovery."
Everybody gets this right? Okay, they are saying the tight end's transfer of the ball (to the running back) was a pass, not a fumble. But it was first batted by #70 for Arkansas before the running back picked it up and should have at that point been ruled a fumble (and not advanced):
Rule 2-11-1 "To fumble the ball is to lose player possession by any act other than passing, kicking or successful handing. The status of the ball is a fumble." (You can argue the tight end was passing the ball backward, but #70 was not passing the ball to the running back.)
The ball stopped being a pass when #70 batted the ball and it hit the ground before the running back picked it up.
The question is not whether the tight end fumbled or made a backwards pass. The question is what do you call what #70 did. (It sure wasn't a backwards pass.)