JacketFan137
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i’m sorry but this is just not something i can agree with based on experience in the field. getting hit in the knees is inherently more dangerous than most any tackle. our bodies are built to sustain impact from like mid thigh to your chest/shoulders, not the knee and below.Not the same mechanism of injury, sorry. It's just not. Chop blocking is generally from the side, not straight on. Chop blocking is done when the player is already engaged high, defenseless, with an inability to disengage to protect themselves. Chop blocks are generally not expected (because they're illegal) so the player never sees it coming. All are reasons why there is no comparison between cut blocking and chop blocking.
Any time you make contact with a vulnerable joint there is risk for injury. Football is an inherently dangerous sport. I would posit that cut blocking is no more dangerous than any other type of blocking. Pancake blocks have the player thrown to the ground and then the blocker fall on him.
while yes, a chop block is more likely to hit the side of your knees, guys running full speed across the field to hit you in the knees will never be safe.
is it the only cause of injury in football. no. no one has made that argument, but in the grand scheme of things the game can be played with or without those blocks and still go on and largely look the same. because the negatives far outweigh the positives this is a rule change that makes logical sense.
at the same time i could make the argument that this is protecting the smaller teams by not allowing them to be cut blocked by larger offensive lineman/TEs/WR.At issue here is that it gives a pretty sizable competitive advantage to the factories that can recruit all world OL/DL. By eliminating the equalizer that was smaller linemen utilizing cut blocks in a zone scheme, it forces schools to play their smaller OL straight up against the bigger DL. In the absence of any real data suggesting a correlation between cut blocks and increased injury probability, this seems an ill informed decision that could hurt any chance of competitive balance between the top tier of P5 and everyone else...
i can see how this could be seen as a slight for the smaller teams but overall it is pretty clearly intentioned for safety. while no data has been presented as i don’t think anyone has really gone out of the way to conduct the research one way or the other, logically thinking about human anatomy and physiology makes it pretty obvious that getting hit in the knees is inherently dangerous and not something humans have evolved to withstand. if that were the case there would be a lot more padding on your knees and ligaments would be vascularized