Don’t learn it the hard way
This is one which comes from a little beyond our territorial
limits, but it’s one you’ve just got to hear.
It’s the semifinals of the state playoffs, in Tacoma, Wash., and
Lynden Christian is on its way to a hard-fought, but well-deserved
19-14 upset victory over the Elma Eagles, the ticket to the state
championship in the 2-A division at the Tacoma Dome last week. Just
seven seconds remain, Lynden Christian has the ball at midfield and
it’s fourth down.
Rather than punt, rather than run a dive into the line and giving
the ball up with perhaps a second or two left, the quarterback takes
the snap and runs 50 yards in the wrong direction with the intent on
giving up a two-point safety as time expires.
The Seattle Times’ story does not make it clear who made the call,
although the coach is described as defending “his call.”
So the quarterback took the snap, turned around and ran 50 yards
with no one in front of him, crossed his own goal line and dropped
the ball to the turf, where it rolled around until an Elma defender,
who had been trailing all the way, picked the ball up.
The quarterback, his teammates and all of the Lynden Christian
fans, believing victory was assured, began celebrating, only to see
the referees signal not a safety and two points for Elma, but a TD
and six points for Elma.
Elma wins, 20-19, and all the Elma fans are delirious, too,
simultaneously.
You see, the quarterback didn’t take a knee to the turf. He just
dropped the ball to the ground and it was a still a live ball and a
fumble.
If he had just turned and thrown the ball in front of him, even
from within the end zone, it would have been a forward pass and an
incompletion, giving Elma a first down at midfield, assuming any time
was left. If he tossed the ball out of the end zone it would have
been a safety. But he just dropped it in the end zone and it was a
live ball.
The defender’s actions were described as “just picking up the
ball,” but later he said he knew the ball was live.
What a way to lose. And what a burden the quarterback will carry
with him for most likely all of his life.
Some will tell you “it’s only a game,” but for those who have put
their hearts and souls into a common endeavor, that statement is
pretty hard to swallow.
Lynden Christian had dominated the game, the quarterback had
completed two touchdown passes and its fans were celebrating.
The jubilation and euphoria of the upset victory was turned inside
out in a matter of seconds and the shocked football team eventually
left the scene without comment.
Later the coach told the Bellingham Herald his kids “felt like
they had won.”
The moral of the story is pretty obvious: Whether you’re a Lync
from Lynden or a Sea King from Corona del Mar, know the rules.
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