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The tuck rule was called in Week 2 of an NFL regular season matchup on September 23, 2001, between the New England Patriots and the New York Jets. [2] With 1:01 left in the second quarter, Patriots defensive end Anthony Pleasant apparently forced Jets quarterback Vinny Testaverde to fumble the ball, with Patriots defensive end Richard Seymour making a recovery. [3]
The Tuck Rule Game was played as part of the 2001–02 NFL playoffs, which would crown the NFL champion for the 2001 season.Under the playoff structure in place at the time, six teams from each of the NFL's two conferences – the AFC and NFC – qualified for the playoffs.
Tuck rule may refer to: Tuck rule (American football) Tuck Rule Game, the 2001 AFC Divisional Playoff game between the New England Patriots and the Oakland Raiders;
Twenty years ago on Jan. 19 in snowy Foxborough, the Tuck Rule became part of NFL lore
The film — which is nominally about the infamous call that helped launch the Patriots' dynasty — is the first step in the careful curation of Brady's legacy, one where everything just *happens ...
The interns didn't know what "The Tuck Rule" was. Some were hardly a year or two old when that play – perhaps the most influential "sliding doors" moment in NFL history – happened, NFL Films ...
This rule was a revival of a 1968 preseason experiment by the NFL and American Football League. The XFL's first incarnation employed a similar rule in which teams ran a single offensive down from the two-yard line (functionally identical to the NFL/NCAA/CFL two-point conversion), also for one point. By the playoffs, two-point and three-point ...
ESPN is airing a new 30 for 30 on the infamous “Tuck Rule” game between the New England Patriots and Oakland Raiders. In January 2002, the Patriots defeated the Raiders in an AFC Divisional ...