during Philadelphia Eagles“Washington's leaders in the NFC championship, there was a strange moment in the goal line in the second half when midfielder Frankie Lovo tried to stop a” warm batch “by jumping over the offensive line.
But he was called to assault … several times.
“Within the American Football Association” It caught at the moment when Lovo jumped on the eagle offensive line without cutting the ball. And because he did so several times, the rulers enter.
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What was said, though, was shocked by many people, including the leaders of Qortrarbeck Jayden Daniels.
“Inference, Defense, No. 4”, the ruling said. “Washington was notified that, at some point, the referee can give a degree if this type of behavior happens again.”
“Give the result? Can you give them a drop?” Daniels responded to the margin.
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Although she succeeded in their favor, the eagles defenders are watching their crimes about to pierce in another degree who did not hear the base as well.
“The next time they do this, give a degree?” Darius Slay, his defensive colleague, Cooper Dijin.
Dijan answered: “The rulers can give us down, I think that if they do it again or something of this,” Digan replied.
The mysterious rule was found in the book of the rules of the American Football Association as Rule 12, Section 3, Article 4.
“In particular, an unfair act: the player or the alternative does not contradict any fair act. The penalty of the distance is because it is considered the fair and regardless of any other specific symbol penalty.
The rule is for unfair and clear situations, and the rulers felt that Lovo was constantly jumping on the jump in his foot to stop Galen Hersz and the harsh batch was too much because the eagles did not pick up the ball.
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Hertz eventually entered the end area in a severe batch of his third hurrying land against the leaders in the 55-23 defeat.
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