- the
player being tackled.
Tackling with
studs up is
considered dangerous. A
studs up
tackle is made when a
player lunges into a
tackle with a leg or both...
- up
tackle in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Tackle may
refer to: In football:
Tackle (football move), a play in
various forms of
football Tackle (gridiron...
- A
defensive tackle (DT) is a
position in
American football that
typically lines up on the line of scrimmage,
opposite one of the
offensive guards; however...
- term "
tackle"
refers to the
offensive tackle position only. The
offensive tackle (OT, T),
sometimes specified as left
tackle (LT) or
right tackle (RT)...
- The
revised law
removes the
possibility of a
spearing tackle not
being penalised if the
tackled player breaks their fall with
their arms. The National...
- ball off to the
other team. A
safety is
scored when the ball
carrier is
tackled in the carrier's own end zone.
Safeties are
worth two points,
which are...
- upon in many
rugby communities as a
dangerous tackling technique, as it puts the
player being tackled at risk of a spine, neck, or head injury. However...
- A
block and
tackle or only
tackle is a
system of two or more
pulleys with a rope or
cable threaded between them,
usually used to lift
heavy loads. The...
-
opposing player.
Sliding tackles can
often be
sources of controversy,
particularly when
players being tackled fall down over the
tackler's foot (or the ball...
- to the risk of
injury to the head and neck of the
player being tackled. High
tackles are
illegal in all
variations of
rugby union play,
including sevens...