Call & Times

When is a sack legal? Hard to know now

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LANDOVER, Md. (AP) — Sure does seem as if "When is a sack just a sack?" is quickly becoming the NFL's new "Did that player lower his helmet too much?" or "What, exactly, is a catch?" It's a fundamenta­l element of football — how a pass-rusher is allowed to bring a QB down to the ground — and no one really seems to be clear on it at the moment. Not Clay Matthews, the Packers linebacker who's been flagged for roughing the passer in each of Green Bay's three games this season. Not Alex Smith, the Redskins quarterbac­k who was sacked by Matthews with about as straightfo­rward a tackle as can be on Sunday. Not Packers coach Mike McCarthy, who yelled at two officials after the call. Not players on either team or on either side of the ball. "Unfortunat­ely this league is going in a direction that a lot of people don't like. I think they're getting soft. The only thing hard about this league is the fines they levy down on guys like me that play the game hard," Matthews said after Green Bay's 31-17 loss at Washington. "Nine years, I've been doing it one way in the NFL, successful­ly, and now it just seems as if that way doesn't work anymore. And that's frustratin­g," Matthews said with a huge sigh. "I don't run the league office," he said, "but you'd like to see football be football." Rule 12, Section 2, Article 9 (b) of the NFL rulebook says that "a defensive player must not unnecessar­ily or violently throw (a passer) down or land on top of him with all or most of the defender's weight. Instead, the defensive player must strive to wrap up the passer with the defensive player's arms and not land on the passer with all or most of his body weight." That rule has been around for years, but the league's competitio­n committee made it a point of emphasis this season. More than 30 roughing-the-passer penalties were called in this season's first two weeks alone. "That was basically my key — that he landed on him with most or all of his body weight," referee Craig Wrolstad told a pool reporter Sunday. "But if you've got a shoulder into him and then landed on him with most of his body weight off him or released him when he went down, then he would have been OK," Wrolstad said. "But in my judgment, I ruled that he landed on him with most or all of his body weight there." If the 15-yard penalty was assessed correctly in this instance, count McCarthy and Matthews among those who think that rule needs to be rewritten.

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