Ask Ray . . . Football Rules and Scoring Questions

If you have football scoring or rules questions, please direct them to me.  Having been the head statistician for the Tampa Bay Bucs for a number of years back in the 1980’s, and also the head statistician for the 1984 Super Bowl (Redskins-Raiders), I have probably seen just about every iteration of how to score certain plays or how to understand different NFL rules.

So, if you are curious about how to interpret a ruling, or, if you’re just trying to win a bet with your buddy, feel free to reach out to me through this website and we’ll get you the answers you want.

Just hit the reply button at the bottom of this post and give me your questions.  All inquiries will be answered in this forum.

Ray Dunlap

Our first three “rules” questions . . .

First of all, let me share with everyone out there that I am happy to provide answers to your football scoring and rules questions.  We got our first three inquiries today from Jim, so here goes:

 

1. Time of Possession – is a punt on 4th down attributed to the kicking team’s Time of Possession?

Yes.  Time of possession after a punt starts on the first offensive play from scrimmage.  It is, however, different on kick-offs.  Since the clock does not start until the receiving team touches the ball, time of possession begins on a kick-off as soon as a return starts.

 

2. Is a sack and the minus yardage it’s own stat or does it come off the passing or rushing stats?

OK, sacks are an actual NFL stat, and so are the yards lost.  But, when tabulating the team stats at the end of a game, you would subtract sack yardage from passing yardage to determine the total number of passing yards to credit each team.

Now, if, in the opinion of the official scorer, the quarterback was attempting a run and was tackled behind the line of scrimmage, it is NOT a sack.  The exception to this is when it is clear that the team was attempting a pass and the quarterback scrambled and got tackled for no gain or a loss.  This is still a sack.  So, when you’re playing APBA Football and you get a scramble number and it results in either no gain or a loss, you should count that as a sack.

If you are playing APBA college teams, it is completely different.  The NCAA does not recognize sacks.  Any yardage lost when a passer is tackled behind the line of scrimmage is considered RUSHING yardage.  So, the quarterback would be given one rushing attempt for whatever negative yardage occurs on the play.

 

3. Last, a QB scramble, I assume, is a rushing stat, correct?

Again, not necessarily.  If the scramble results in 0 yards or lost yardage, it is not a run, it is a sack.  If, however, the quarterback gets positive yardage on his scramble, it is considered a rushing attempt.

Introducing – “Ray’s Rulings”

At least five times a week, I will receive an email from a variety of people asking me a “statisticians” type question. For example, “Does the offensive team receive credit for a third down conversion resulting from a defensive penalty?” “How do I correctly score Rare Play 7-5?” ”Is a first down awarded on a touchdown?” I still run across situations where I’m scratching my head on how to properly score something that occurred during the course of a game. To assist with this matter, I’ve enlisted the help of an expert in this area.

APBA Hall of Famer, Mr. Ray Dunlap, was chief statistician for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers from 1981 thru 1987. Ray has been kind enough to volunteer his time to answer any “statisticians-type” question anyone in the APBA Football community might have. Ray will be authoring a post titled “ASK RAY” and filing it under “Ray’s Rulings” category. If you have a question, just look at the CATEGORIES widget (left-hand sidebar of site), scroll down to “Ray’s Rulings”, click on the hyperlink and locate the ASK RAY post. Ask him your question by clicking on the Comment icon which is directly to the right of the ASK Ray title. I will be compiling questions that I’ve received and asking him but to really have a comprehensive library it will require everyone’s participation.