It depends on whether or not he has the ball in his hands when he hits the ground of the endzone. If it is not in his possession, then it is a fumble and can be recovered by a defender. If it is in his hands and he touches the endzone, then it is a touchdown.
If he was in possession of the ball when the ball crossed the goal line, it's a touchdown. As soon as the ball breaks the plane of the goal line, the ball is dead and the play is over. Anything that happens after that is irrelevant.
A touchdown in American football occurs when a player carrying the ball crosses the opponent's goal line into the end zone, scoring six points for their team.
ghoul!
Yes, the moment the ball breaks the plane of the end zone while in possession of an offensive player, a touchdown is called and the play ends.
In the NFL, a player must have possession of the ball and cross the goal line for a touchdown to be scored. If the ball crosses the plane of the goal line, even if the player does not, it is still considered a touchdown. This impacts scoring plays by determining whether a team earns points based on whether the ball successfully crosses the goal line.
Yes. The technical way to score a touchdown is to have to ball "cross the plane" into the endzone without the player being down or out of bounds. With a catch, the player must establish himself as inbounds while maintaining possession. In the NFL, the player must do so with two feet inbounds. In NCAA Division I football, the player only needs to do so with one foot inbounds. With a run, the player must have not stepped out of bounds before the ball crosses the plane into he endzone.
it is not a touchdown because the ball never broke the plane.
The ball has to be in the touchdown zone. If it is above the zone it is still a touchdown. Take Troy Polamalu's touchdown on Dec,12,2010. He dived, broke the plane of the goal line but he was holding the football above the zone so it counts as a touchdown. In some cases the ref might not count it.
thomas wins football
No. Only the point of the ball has to cross into the endzone to be concidered a touchdown, assuming the player has possesion of the ball. If the player catches the ball in the end zone, then yes, he has to get both feet down for the score to count. It's no different from the requirement to get both feet down for a completion on any other part of the field. In college and Canadian football, however, a player is only required to have one foot down for completions and touchdowns.
when it crosses the boundry, even if its in the air
A football is in play either until it crosses the out-of-bounds plain or if the ball is secured while crossing the plain of the end zone
It depends on the amount you were arrested with. Above a certain so-called "personal-use" amount (set by state statute) and it crosses the line into "Possession With Intent to Distribute" a felony.