dressedcheeseside
Helluva Engineer
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Would you allow up tempo in the final two minutes of each half?They do that at times. You get past the D dragging tail by giving a D a certain amount of time to do to. It’s simple really.
Would you allow up tempo in the final two minutes of each half?They do that at times. You get past the D dragging tail by giving a D a certain amount of time to do to. It’s simple really.
That could be worked out according to rules. I would also add that any “injured” player must leave the game for at least 3 plays, or some such thing. A violation of that would cost the D a TO, or a 15-yard PF penalty if there are no TO’s left.Would you allow up tempo in the final two minutes of each half?
But it’s not within the rules to fake an injury. There are at least 2 flags that could be thrown for fake injuries (unsportsmanlike conduct and delay of game). There’s just no way for the officials to separate the cheating from the legitimate injury right now. That doesn’t make it a legal action.I think I finally see your point. In your view, violation of tax law and faking an injury are both cheating although the latter does not currently involve a penalty. The difference is the penalty.
Maybe it’s just semantics, but one could easily argue that if it's within the rules, it's not cheating. Unethical (subjective) perhaps, but not cheating.
I’ve never seen that happen. I’ve never heard of that happening.I have seen a team on defense deliberately take their time substituting while the ref has his hand on the ball to stop play, but the play clock is running. The team on offense has so little play clock left that they have to burn a timeout. Within the rules, apparently.
It’s happened.I’ve never seen that happen. I’ve never heard of that happening.
It is fairly routine if the offense makes a substitution with about 15 seconds on the play clock. I have seen it many times in both College Football and the NFL. It is legal and teams use the rules to their advantage. Good coaching in my opinion!I’ve never seen that happen. I’ve never heard of that happening.
They played soccer as kids????Let me ask the question: Why do you think defensive players are flopping?
SMH. I try to be serious and I get this stuff.They played soccer as kids????
You cannot ask that question.For those that think this is the end of the world, did you refuse to use "word" on a professor when studying for tests - especially on those profs that would reuse questions?
Never. But the professors knew that was out there. That’s the reason half the test was unsolvable. (At least for me)For those that think this is the end of the world, did you refuse to use "word" on a professor when studying for tests - especially on those profs that would reuse questions?
Our fanbase, especially the older ones, ARE the reason GT went from a top 10 all time program to an afterthought. They were fat and happy and when the times changed GT did not and our fans accepted it and came up with a huge list of whining excuses we hear every week. Our fans have spent decades throwing out meaningless tropes about academics/doing it the right way.Simple - you play to win the game within the rules. A life lesson everyone should learn as soon as possible. This is not a beauty contest. It is a very physical game where players are asked to go full out and hit other players as hard as they can. The plays ae legal. There is not cheating involved!
Any Alumni that would rather lose playing "polite" football is not helping GT athletics which are already at a disadvantage to most of our opponents!
It happens every week. Watch UGA. Kirby uses this rule a lot. When the offense subs in the middle of the play clock he has his DLinemen gingerly jog off while the subs do the same. Meanwhile the ref stands over the ball while the QB freaks out. It’s pretty awesome but it’s the offenses fault for not getting their play or set in fast enough.I’ve never seen that happen. I’ve never heard of that happening.
Our fanbase, especially the older ones, ARE the reason GT went from a top 10 all time program to an afterthought. They were fat and happy and when the times changed GT did not and our fans accepted it and came up with a huge list of whining excuses we hear every week. Our fans have spent decades throwing out meaningless tropes about academics/doing it the right way.
The right way is to win the freaking game you are participating in. No one says we shouldn’t steal professors from MIT yet a school like UGA wins games and we act like they are the great Satan. We are the losers for not paying players the last 40 years. The most positive thing I’ve seen this season from the GT football program is that either our coaches or our players FINALLY played to win the game and using the fake injury concept to do it. We won with 15 seconds left. If we didn’t fake it we would have been in OT or lost in regulation.
Win!
No thanks. I am content to take your word on this.It happens every week. Watch UGA.
The rules specifically say that the officials cannot attempt to determine if an injury was real or fake. So by the rules, it is not unsportsmanlike conduct. It can't even be investigated to see if it was unsportsmanlike conduct. I understand your desire for the rules to say that it is unsportsmanlike, and that it can be investigated and enforced. The current rules do not do that.Its pretty ridiculous to demand that the NCAA explicitly ban every conceivable act of unsportsmanlike conduct. Pausing the game when an athlete is injured doesn't need clarification to exclude fake injuries. You've been pretty clear in your position that if anyone gets away with an unsportsmanlike practice, we should do it too, and take no responsibility for our own behavior because if we do something embarrassing and don't get punished then the issue is with the rules. I understand your position and I disagree.
Ok. I like watching high level football so I watch all teams that are well coached and play in big games. But I also watch the ACC too.No thanks. I am content to take your word on this.
When I've seen it, I thought it should fall into the category of unfair tactics and result in an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty like some other exploits, but it apparently is allowed by the rule book.It is fairly routine if the offense makes a substitution with about 15 seconds on the play clock. I have seen it many times in both College Football and the NFL. It is legal and teams use the rules to their advantage. Good coaching in my opinion!
Integrity. Character. Sportsmanship. Ethics. … ‘89 alum here, and I was embarrassed of our team. Reflects poorly on our university. “Just because others do it” is a lame argument - and reflects poorly on those making this excuse. Ask yourself what it teaches the players about life and how to conduct themselves. What example are we setting for the students (and all other fans) that witness this? We are supposed to be developing leaders, right? We are better than this, or we should be…. All alums should call on the administration to FIX IT!