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A fake spike is a trick play in American football. When the clock is running low, it is not uncommon for a quarterback to spike the ball to stop the clock, either to set up for the next play or bring on the special teams. Here though, the objective is to trick the defense into believing that no downfield play will be run.
The Clock Play was a famous trick play in American football, immortalized in what came to be known as the Fake Spike Game, [1] played on November 27, 1994. The contest was played by the National Football League (NFL)'s Miami Dolphins and New York Jets [ 2 ] that featured one of the most famous comeback plays in league history. [ 3 ]
A spike can only be legally performed when the passer is under center, performs the spike immediately after the snap in a single continuous movement, and when the game clock is running. Spiking at any other point while the ball is live is always intentional grounding regardless of pressure or location; this is called a delayed spike. [4]
NFL officials took heat on Sunday for an unwarranted clock stoppage during a game between the Washington Commanders and New Orleans Saints. On 4th-and-3 with 17 seconds left, Saints quarterback ...
Fake Spike Game: November 27, 1994 Miami Dolphins: 28–24 New York Jets: Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino ran a trick play, pretending to stop the game clock but instead threw a pass that scored the game-winning touchdown, ultimately giving Miami the 28–24 victory. [41] Snowball Game (1995) December 23, 1995 San Diego Chargers: 27–17 New ...
When the clock is running low, it is not uncommon for a quarterback to spike the ball to stop the clock, either to set up for the next play or bring on the special teams. Here too, the objective is to trick the defense into believing that no downfield play will be run—but not fool the officials into thinking the same, which can also ruin the ...
Notice the 2 Rose Bowl cases: In accordance with college rules, the clock stopped (with only 2 seconds left) while the sideline chains were being moved for 1st down, and 2 seconds turned out to be too short for a spike (the spike play counted, but there could be no next play because the clock ran out on the spike play).
Indiana quarterback Kurtis Rourke and the high-powered Hoosiers offense will aim to prove they can move the ball against a stout Notre Dame defense that ranks in the top 10 in overall yards ...