Code Silver, I repeat we have a Code Silver. This is not a drill. Boomer is booming. We need a response team armed with Facebook memes and Sean Hannity clips dispatched immediately.
Code Silver, I repeat we have a Code Silver. This is not a drill. Boomer is booming. We need a response team armed with Facebook memes and Sean Hannity clips dispatched immediately.
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I think a more elegant way of what SD is saying, is many of us detest rule changes the mess with the essence of the game. I didn't like it when the NFL began starting the clock after going out of bounds and then college too. That is a fundamental rule; you go out of bounds, clocks should stay stopped, just like an incomplete pass. I still don't like it.
Now, one of the really cool, quirks in the college game is the clock stop to move the chains. It really creates an interesting dynamic, particularly when one team is down by 2 scores late in a game. 2 minutes is not a enough time, and you are messing the game dynamic just like they did with the out of bounds crap.
So, just stop it. But no, games are long do to the spread BS offenses and TV timeouts, so better to mess with fundamental elements of the game, I guess.
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Rules get changed as the game changes. Not sure why that's such a problem for some folks. Those "spread BS offenses" are a natural evolution of the game, causing the game to stretch longer and longer. Prior to those "spread BS offenses", it was the West Coast Offense that was lengthening the game. They've been making little, almost unnoticeable at least to me, changes to the game for decades to combat the length of the game. If they didn't do this, the average game would be 4+ hours long and people would probably lose some interest...which would be devastating to this game that we all love.
By the way, I absolutely LOVE the college rule that stops the clock to move the chains. I really wish the NFL did that. It is such a cool dynamic in the college game when one team is down and trying to get back in the game late.
Insert something clever here...
And it's really not to move the chains because the play clock is still 40 seconds in both cases and the ball is ready for play in both instances. There is probably some legacy reason for it, but it's definitely not to move the chains today. It is a big part of strategy today at the end of a close game.
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