BleedGoldNWhite21
Helluva Engineer
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Every single team does this. It’s literally a part of the game now. It will spark a rule change, eventually, but it is naive to think we’re above it.
This.Every single team does this. It’s literally a part of the game now. It will spark a rule change, eventually, but it is naive to think we’re above it.
No offense @SwarmingRound but with 15+ years of cheating under UNC's belt (https://www.cnn.com/2014/10/22/us/unc-report-academic-fraud/index.html). They deserve a bit of medicine until the year 2050. **** their program.
This is not against any rule or it would be called by the refs and teams do it against us. CFB needs to fix it. This is not cheating.When you cheat to win, the win becomes less meaningful. Just look at how people view the Houston Astros world series that they won. It means less.
Sometimes there's a fine line between gaming the system and cheating. This is not one of them. I am all for gaming the system within the rules. Hack-a-shaq is gaming the system. Hidden ball trick is gaming the system. All good. Intentionally faking an injury is unacceptable on any level.
One of the hallmarks of American football is toughness. This is the antithesis of that and undermines everything that this game is supposed to represent. The minute that people are hurt, the game stops and we handle it. This makes it impossible to address legitimate injuries.
That’s just it, we should be above it.Every single team does this. It’s literally a part of the game now. It will spark a rule change, eventually, but it is naive to think we’re above it.
Ole Miss hangs their hat on it, and they're a top 10 team.... in any case it doesn't hurt their perception. If it gets our defense more rest and/or opportunities to stop the other guy, then as long as it's not against the rules go for it.Glad to see GT actually doing it for once. Louisville did it against GT in that game whenever GT started to get momentum going as well. Literally happens every game that is close. Getting brownie points because you’re the “morally better team” won’t help you in this situation. And GT’s reputation isn’t going to magically go down the gutter by doing it either. It’s been happening for like a decade now if not longer. However, I do prefer GT to just being good enough to win on their own without having to exploit the rules.
Make it 2 or 3 plays if in the same possession, or the can come back in the next series.It will likely create a rules change. Maybe the injured player can't reenter the game during that series. Only one play now.
Every other team is using it, and we have to. It’s cheesy but it’s legal right now.Every single team does this. It’s literally a part of the game now. It will spark a rule change, eventually, but it is naive to think we’re above it.
I rember ugag doing this to us years back in close games. Was not a fan of it then. Not a fan of it now.First of all, hell of a finish to an amazing game to get to a 5-2 start.
However, I am so embarrassed to see Tech defensive players coordinating which one of them should fake an injury in this UNC game, on UNC's last scoring drive.
They did it multiple times. I am appalled. This is not "whatever it takes to win," it is cowardly, unsportsmanlike, and max cringe.
If the other team did it, I'd be up in arms, and I'm even more upset that we would do it.
As a proud double jacket alum and multi decade fan, I cannot endorse this brand of football. If I see them do this crap again, I will be incredibly disappointed.
That’s just it, we should be above it.
It's a way to level the playing field. It didn't exist until the HUO became popular.I get it. It isn't new. What does seem to be new is a different player going down on every play. As a team, it looks like you're saying: We can't win if we can't catch our breath, disrupt their momentum, or whatever else we hoped to gain by doing it. I do get that guys go down with cramps, but come on, most, if not all, of these were faked injuries.