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In Super Bowl XLVI, the unintended use of an extra man on defense exposed a loophole that [the NFL promptly closed]. In Super Bowl XLVII, another loophole has been exposed.
But this one will be harder to remedy.
Facing fourth and seven from their own eight and clinging to a five-point lead, the Ravens opted to take an intentional safety. The clock showed 12 seconds at the snap, and the Ravens were able to milk eight of those ticks as punter [Sam Koch] moved to the back corner of the end zone.
Helping Koch delay as long as possible his exit from the field of play were multiple Ravens players who held 49ers defenders who were trying to get to Koch more quickly. And while a flag for holding inexplicably wasn’t thrown, the outcome would have been no different. Holding in the end zone by the offensive team triggers a safety, and that’s exactly what the Ravens were willing to concede.
Under the circumstances, avoiding the safety was irrelevant. Using as much time as possible was the goal.
The challenge comes from finding an acceptable way to address the situation. For a play that ends in a safety with a holding penalty committed in the end zone, the most obvious solution would be to enforce the penalty on the free kick, moving the ball from the 20 to the 10. But that won’t remedy the fact that a deliberate penalty created a strategic advantage by taking time off the clock.
So perhaps the fairest outcome would be to award the safety, and to restore the clock to the time remaining before the play in question began.
Regardless, it’s a situation that cries out for further study by the Competition Committee.
it doesn't matter if the kicking team is already intentionally giving the opposing team a safety or not, it's still a play in the game and is supposed to be officiated like the rest of the series of plays. Koch could've been forced out of bounds a lot sooner than he was saving extra time on the clockThe thing is, even if every ref in the game threw a flag, the play still wouldn't have ended until Koch was tackled or ran out of bounds. So flags could have been on the field and every Ravens player still could have tackled and held down every defender if they want.
Helping Koch delay as long as possible his exit from the field of play were multiple Ravens players who held49ers defenders who were trying to get to Koch more quickly. And while a flag for holding inexplicably wasn’t thrown, the outcome would have been no different. Holding in the end zone by the offensive team triggers a safety, and that’s exactly what the Ravens were willing to concede.It made sense to hold because nothing happens that isn't happening already. Would throwing the flag make the time the play took any shorter?