year_of_the_swarm
Jolly Good Fellow
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I have seen this in a few Georgia Tech games this year, and noticed it around the country as well. Nobody is draining the clock in critical situations.
Against North Carolina... tie game. 8:00 left. Snapped with 10 seconds left on first and second down, 8 seconds left on 3rd down... 9 seconds left on 3rd and 7... 14 seconds left on the following 4th down play.. 10 seconds left the immediate play with 3:41 to go.. 6 seconds left on the TD play.
So UNC has 3:00 minutes left to score and tie the game.... But it could have easily been under 2 minutes or better if they weren't snapping with 9-14 seconds left in that situation.
There is a big difference between getting the ball back with 3 minutes and 1 minute.
OU did this against Oklahoma State this weekend too... Saw it in a few other "crunch" situations that teams just seem to be running their offense and not intentionally killing the clock.
Against North Carolina... tie game. 8:00 left. Snapped with 10 seconds left on first and second down, 8 seconds left on 3rd down... 9 seconds left on 3rd and 7... 14 seconds left on the following 4th down play.. 10 seconds left the immediate play with 3:41 to go.. 6 seconds left on the TD play.
So UNC has 3:00 minutes left to score and tie the game.... But it could have easily been under 2 minutes or better if they weren't snapping with 9-14 seconds left in that situation.
There is a big difference between getting the ball back with 3 minutes and 1 minute.
OU did this against Oklahoma State this weekend too... Saw it in a few other "crunch" situations that teams just seem to be running their offense and not intentionally killing the clock.