Hand-off

Running back Chris Johnson of the East Carolina Pirates (#5) receiving the handoff and rushing the ball during the 2007 Hawaii Bowl

In American football, a handoff is the act of handing the ball directly from one player to another, i. e. without it leaving the first player's hands.[1] Most rushing plays on offense begin with a handoff from the quarterback to another running back. The biggest risk with any hand-off is the chance of fumble on the exchange.[2] A hand-off can occur in any direction. Sometimes called a "switch" in touch football. Alternately spelled without the hyphen; i.e., "handoff".

References

  1. ^ "The Quarterback's Stance, Drop Back, and Hand Off". dummies.com.
  2. ^ Schaeffer, Jeffrey W. (2003). Football the Basics: Strategies and Techniques. ISBN 9781412005128.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Gridiron football maneuvers
  • Huddle
  • Stance (three-point)
Offense
  • Snap
  • Hand-off
  • Blocking
  • Pulling
  • Spiral
  • Routes
  • Pump fake
  • Cutback
  • Juke
  • Forward pass
  • Lateral pass
  • Stiff arm
  • Scramble
  • Shift
  • Motion
Defense
  • Tackle
  • Rush
  • Stunt
  • Blitz
  • Shooting the gap
  • Bump and run
  • Double coverage
  • Spy
  • v
  • t
  • e
Gridiron football concepts
Codes
Levels of play
Field
Lines
Spaces
  • End zone
  • Red zone
  • Dead zone
  • Neutral zone
  • Coffin corner
  • Flat
  • Gap
  • Hole
  • Pocket
Scoring
Ball handling
Turnovers
Downs
Play clock
Statistics
Practice
Officiating
Related