We're using the 11th Edition rules with the following exceptions:
| Pull: If the disc lands and stays inbounds (in the endzone or playing
field proper), it must be played from the spot at which it lies. If the
disc flies out of bounds, it can be played as a brick, from midfield at
the point where it went out of bounds, or on the sideline where it went
out of bounds. If the disc lands in the endzone and rolls or slides out of
bounds at the sideline, then it must be played at the nearest front cone
of the endzone. If the disc lands in the endzone and rolls or slides out
the back of the endzone, then it must be walked up from the point at which
it left the endzone by the shortest path to the front of the endzone. Brick: Twenty yards. The spot will be marked on all fields. 2-Point Huck: Two points will be awarded to a reception of a pass in the endzone if the pass was from beyond midfield and the pass is a cross-gender pass. The thrower must have both feet behind the midfield line. Teams may retreat (by passing backward) to position themselves beyong midfield in order to attempt the 2-point huck. Midfield will be marked on all fields. An uncontested foul on the reception of a two-point huck may be taken to the goal-line and played for a one point goal or returned to the original thrower to offer the chance at another two-point throw. Cashman Clause: If a cross-gender huck from beyond midfield is mac-ed by a defender and is still caught in the endzone, it earns 2 points. Any cross-gender huck from beyond midfield which is mac-ed by the offense to another offensive receiver in the endzone is worth only 1 point. Coed Pull: Each team, independent of the other, is required to alternate the gender of its puller. Example: team X starts the game (0-0) with a woman pulling; when Team X wins its first point to make it 1-3, a man is required to pull. Meanwhile, Team Y--without regard to Team X's alternating gender sequence--has also alternated genders for each of its 3 pulls. 4/3 Gender Ratio: The offense will dictate whether the point is to be played with 4 women/3 men or 4 men/3 women, and the defense must match. The captains in a game may elect to make concessions; if these are unilateral concessions the captain giving those concessions may revoke them at any point in the game. Captains may discuss giving concessions at any point in the game (this is especially encouraged if there is an injury which affects a team's ability to conform to the 4/3 gender ratio). If no concessions are given, a team unable to match the gender ratio must play with fewer players. |