You're right Martin - someone should have changed the subject line really.

From: vliets...@btinternet.com
To: usma@colostate.edu
Subject: [USMA:45998] Re: FIFA Football Fields
Date: Sun, 11 Oct 2009 07:55:23 +0100


























I came back from holiday two days ago and
picked up this thread.  There were one or two postings about Association
Football (the game administered by FIFA), and thereafter everything relates to 
“American
football”, a game over which FIFA has no jurisdiction. 

 









From:
owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf Of 
Carleton MacDonald

Sent: 11 October 2009 02:30

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:45997] Re: FIFA
Football Fields



 

Changing that
would be more of a disruption than changing 100 yards to 100 meters.  

 

For those
outside the USA, the basic
idea of US
football is  to get the ball across the other team’s goal line. 
Get it across by a pass (to someone in the end zone beyond the goal line) or a
rush (running with the ball over the goal line is 6 points; this is called a
touchdown.  You get to try to kick the ball through the goal posts after
doing that; if you succeed, that’s 1 more point.  (You can also try
to pass or rush it through; this is less certain, but if you do, that’s 2
points.)  The other primary way to score is a field goal.  This is
when you can’t get close enough to the goal line to get the ball over, so
you try to kick it through.  If you succeed, that’s 3 points. 
There are a couple other ways to score but they are weird.

 

To move the
ball, you get four plays to move it 10 yards toward the opponent’s goal
line.  If you succeed (it can take fewer than four plays) you get a “first
down” and you have four more plays to get another 10 yards.  You can
advance the ball by passing it to another player or by giving it to a player
who runs with it.  Meanwhile, the 11 guys on the other team are trying to
keep you from doing that, usually by tackling you or running into you (which is
why all the body armor).   The ball is put into motion by someone on
the offensive line, the center, shoving it through his legs to the quarterback,
who is behind him.  The quarterback then tries to find someone to hand it
to (rush) or throw it to (pass), or, in a few cases when he can’t find
anyone and he is in the clear, by running with it himself.  He has to do
this before the defensive players shove their way through the offensive line
(some of whom do not ever get the ball; their job is to keep the defensive
players away from the quarterback) and get to him.  They try not to let
the defense do that because if the quarterback gets tackled (he is eligible for
that if he has the ball) and injured a very valuable player is now out of the
game.  If the quarterback is tackled before he can pass or hand off the
ball this is called a ‘sack’ and the defensive player who did that
then usually does a full-of-himself dance maneuver, with his fingers in the air
to indicate that he is Number One.  Defensive players who can sack the
quarterback are very valuable as they can cause a play to stop and usually
cause a loss of distance for the offensive team (because the quarterback is
farther back than where the ball started while he’s looking for someone
to pass it to or hand it to).  This means on the next down the offensive
team has farther to go to get first down, a disadvantage.

 

When passing, a
couple people on the offensive line called wide receivers run downfield and try
to get open so the quarterback can throw the ball to them.  If this
succeeds a lot of distance can be gotten; once the wide receiver is stopped the
ball starts play again at that location, but sometimes he is open and runs
through to the goal line, a touchdown, and 6 points.   When rushing,
the rusher basically bulldozes through the defensive line of the other team.
Good rushers can make a path for themselves.  Good players on the
defensive line can make sure that path does not get created.

 

The offensive
does not normally take four plays to try to advance the ball.   If
they have three and haven’t gone 10 years, they normally use the fourth
play to kick the ball away.  Otherwise, if the fourth play fails, the
defensive team gets the ball in a very favorable position.  When the ball
changes possession the team that was the offensive team (the one that lost the
ball) then puts its defensive players out there (they are different as it’s
different skills) and the team that was the defensive team (the one that got
the ball) then puts its offensive players out there.

 

That’s 
basically how it works.  For soccer, or football/futbol as it’s
called in the rest of the world, there don’t seem to be plays, just a
bunch of guys kicking the ball back and forth and back and forth until one gets
lucky and gets it into the goal net.  This can lead to a 0-0 score after
the 90 minutes of play, then 0-0 after the overtime periods, then finally a
penalty kick faceoff.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=noOHdTQd6H8&feature=related

 

Carleton

 





From:
owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf Of Pat 
Naughtin

Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009
15:50

To: U.S. Metric Association

Cc: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:45989] Re: FIFA
Football Fields





 





On 2009/10/10, at 03:49 , Pierre Abbat wrote:



 



What if the field were set to 90 meters? (Disclaimer: I know
practically 

nothing about football. I know what a field looks like and what a ball
looks 

like. That's about it.)



Pierre







 



Dear Pierre,



 





If the football field was set to 90 metres then a first-down could be
reset to:





 





'the whole nine metres'!





 





However, like you, I know little about this type of football.





 

















Cheers,





 





Pat Naughtin





Author of the ebook, Metrication Leaders Guide, that you
can obtain from http://metricationmatters.com/MetricationLeadersGuideInfo.html 





PO
  Box 305 Belmont 3216,





Geelong, Australia





Phone: 61 3 5241 2008





 





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