Hook and lateral

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The hook and ladder or hook and lateral is a trick play in American football. It starts with the hook, which is where a wide receiver runs a predetermined distance, usually 10 yards down the field, and along the sideline, and "hooks in" towards the center of the field to receive a forward pass from the quarterback. Another offensive player (usually another wide receiver) times a run so that he is at full speed, just behind the player with the ball at the time of the catch. As the defenders close in on the stationary ball carrier, he laterals the ball to the teammate running at full speed in the opposite direction of the original receiver.

If unanticipated, this play puts defenders out of position, running in the wrong direction. If the second receiver catches the lateral in stride, he can be long gone before defenders can react. However, the offense runs a high risk of turning the ball over if it is not handled properly because, unlike a forward pass, a dropped lateral pass results in a live ball.

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[edit] Examples

  • The Miami Dolphins pulled a successful "hook and lateral" play at the end of the first half of their AFC playoff game against the San Diego Chargers on Jan. 2, 1982. The play gave the Dolphins huge momentum going into the second half, but the Chargers eventually won in overtime.
  • The Utah Utes ran a successful version of the play in the 2005 Fiesta Bowl against the Pittsburgh Panthers. Steve Savoy caught the ball on a short pass and lateraled to Paris Warren who took it into the end zone.
  • The Boise State Broncos pulled another successful "hook and lateral" play against the Oklahoma Sooners on 4th down and 18 for a 50-yard touchdown that brought them within one point with seven seconds left in the fourth quarter of the 2007 Fiesta Bowl. The subsequent PAT sent the game into overtime. Boise State later scored a touchdown in overtime on a wide receiver rollout option pass, and won by scoring the ensuing two-point conversion on the seldom-seen Statue of Liberty play.

[edit] "Hook and Ladder"

The "hook and lateral" is sometimes referred to as a "hook and ladder," which is a topic of considerable debate among football fans and analysts. Although the terms are used interchangeably by some, others believe this is not technically accurate.

The "hook" refers to the pattern run by the receiver who catches the pass from the quarterback. The "lateral" refers to the pitching of the ball by the receiver to his teammate. This is not synonymous with a "ladder", which is a specific route (also called a "chair") in which a receiver cuts out before turning up the field along the sideline. If the "hook" receiver laterals the ball to a teammate running a ladder route, the play could accurately be described as a "hook and ladder." This would not be true of many hook and lateral plays; in the case of the play run by the Boise State Broncos in the 2007 Fiesta Bowl, the player who received the lateral from the "hook" receiver was running a slant route across the center of the field rather than a ladder route.

On the January 2, 2007 broadcast of ESPN's Around the Horn, sportswriter Woody Paige claimed, perhaps facetiously, that the name "hook and ladder" originated with NYC Firemen Football Team in Hell's Kitchen, New York. This was in response to the other panelists ridiculing his use of "hook and ladder" rather than "hook and lateral." The next day, Jay Mariotti claimed the phrase "hook and ladder" referred to coal mining in Pennsylvania in the 1930s -- his research claims that coal miners need a hook and ladder when trapped in a mine. Another possible explanation is that "hook and ladder" is just a corruption of the phrase "hook and lateral," similar to how the FBI's official case name for Theodore Kaczynski ("UNABOM," for "university and airline bomber") was repeated misspelled "UNABOMB" by the media.

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