Re: Email to Phil Clarke r...
Posted: Fri Mar 16, 2007 9:25 am
moved to "General RL" - interesting debate though.
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Ey, as i am an adopted Aspuller (brinsop technically) I have a picture of me and phil clarke at Our Ladys summer fair in the early 90s. plus he winked at me once at churchlucky 13 posted:
Clarky makes me embarrassed to be a fellow Aspuller![]()
So what your saying is if two players are at full pelt and as an example player A releases the ball as his foot hits the try line by the time player B receives the ball it will be over the try line? I can't see itjinkin jimmy posted:
JIMH you are spot on. If 2 players are running down the field the player in front can pass backwards to his team mate yet their forward momentum means the ball travels backwards in relation to their movement but forwards over the ground. That is the momentum rule. Like others I was saddened to see Clarke get this so wrong, whereas I expect Stevo to cock it up.
Fujiman posted:So what your saying is if two players are at full pelt and as an example player A releases the ball as his foot hits the try line by the time player B receives the ball it will be over the try line? I can't see itjinkin jimmy posted:
JIMH you are spot on. If 2 players are running down the field the player in front can pass backwards to his team mate yet their forward momentum means the ball travels backwards in relation to their movement but forwards over the ground. That is the momentum rule. Like others I was saddened to see Clarke get this so wrong, whereas I expect Stevo to cock it up.
While i understand what your saying but if you pass a ball back it goes back.Using another example i have never seen a footballer going at full speed cross a ball back from the dead ball line and by the time it reachs the penalty area it has gone past the goal. Whats the difference?JIMH posted:Fujiman posted:So what your saying is if two players are at full pelt and as an example player A releases the ball as his foot hits the try line by the time player B receives the ball it will be over the try line? I can't see itjinkin jimmy posted:
JIMH you are spot on. If 2 players are running down the field the player in front can pass backwards to his team mate yet their forward momentum means the ball travels backwards in relation to their movement but forwards over the ground. That is the momentum rule. Like others I was saddened to see Clarke get this so wrong, whereas I expect Stevo to cock it up.
That is what happens Fujiman. If two players are running at full pelt and the passes the ball to where the player was at the very moment he released it the other player will have run straight past it. The players momentum means that when the ball is passed at speed it will actually travel forwrd in relation to the ground. If you have sky plus or a video have a look at some passes using your pause button
It might help to think of a more extreme example: if a plane drops a bomb, it will land far ahead of the point where it was dropped because the bomb initially has the same forward speed as the plane.Fujiman posted:While i understand what your saying but if you pass a ball back it goes back.Using another example i have never seen a footballer going at full speed cross a ball back from the dead ball line and by the time it reachs the penalty area it has gone past the goal. Whats the difference?JIMH posted:Fujiman posted: So what your saying is if two players are at full pelt and as an example player A releases the ball as his foot hits the try line by the time player B receives the ball it will be over the try line? I can't see it
That is what happens Fujiman. If two players are running at full pelt and the passes the ball to where the player was at the very moment he released it the other player will have run straight past it. The players momentum means that when the ball is passed at speed it will actually travel forwrd in relation to the ground. If you have sky plus or a video have a look at some passes using your pause button
and get a nice fine off the police???GeoffN posted:It might help to think of a more extreme example: if a plane drops a bomb, it will land far ahead of the point where it was dropped because the bomb initially has the same forward speed as the plane.Fujiman posted:While i understand what your saying but if you pass a ball back it goes back.Using another example i have never seen a footballer going at full speed cross a ball back from the dead ball line and by the time it reachs the penalty area it has gone past the goal. Whats the difference?JIMH posted:
That is what happens Fujiman. If two players are running at full pelt and the passes the ball to where the player was at the very moment he released it the other player will have run straight past it. The players momentum means that when the ball is passed at speed it will actually travel forwrd in relation to the ground. If you have sky plus or a video have a look at some passes using your pause button
Another one you can try for yourself; throw something backwards out of the window of a moving car and watch where it lands, relative to the point where you threw it.
Similarly, the ball initially has the same forward speed as the player passing it.
You will, of course, go back and collect it afterwards...mike binder posted:
and get a nice fine off the police???