From its European league to regular season games played in London, the NFL has been trying to get American football to take hold overseas.

But the league will always be a hard sell when it has to compete with a similar sport that allows this kind of exciting—and entirely legal—move:

Reddit user malta- recently posted this play from the Australian Football League in the Sports community, and it’s called a “specky”—or “spectacular mark.” The move is as much a part of Australian-rules football as the concussion is to the NFL.

What makes the specky in the gif so, um, spectacular (Andrew Walker, the player making the catch, won Mark of the Year for it in 2011) and legal is that the player doesn’t put his hands on his opponent’s back to elevate. If he had, he could’ve been penalized for hands in the back, a controversial rule introduced in 2007 that makes plays like this harder to execute legally.

What else should know about the specky? Here are a few quick facts:

It’s also called a “screamer” or “hanger.”

Rules prevent players who are catching the ball from being pushed in mid-air by an opponent.

Specky: Mark of the Year is a popular Australian video game for mobile devices that was released in 2011.

Australians love the specky so much that they have immortalized it in music, theater, poetry, and sculpture.

Can’t get enough of speckies now? Need to see more? Check out some of the highlights user PunkSpike linked to in the thread. If you’re in the mood for a video that collects speckies from the same season as the gif (and you don’t mind listening to “Champagne Supernova”), watch this compilation from 2011: