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As others have said, I have zero faith that this will be called correctly and will likely directly impact 2-3 games this season.
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this is officially dumbest thing ever.
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Guys get hurt, will always get hurt, will never stop getting hurt. |
Just play flag football and wear pink jerseys
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It's the stupidest thing to hear morons say you can't tackle clean and still be physical. Our defense just proved that you can be punishing without being pieces of shit. |
Karlaftis is about to be the 2024 version of Taylor on this call. He is gonna get wrongly flagged for this, a lot, if it passes.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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I never said players can't tackle clean and still be physical. Obviously the flag football pink jersey comment was a joke. I don't want players to try and injure other players but it is reality and they can change the rules all they want. That's not going to change.. https://theathletic.com/3635296/2022...injure-player/ Quote:
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How is it different than Denver's culture of targeting the backs of players legs? Dirty play is for cheaters and undisciplined teams. |
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Injuries are a reality in football, no doubt. But you can't let players intentionally try to hurt other players as a means to an end. |
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But usually not. Browning was actually halfway decent but burrow is way more fun to watch. Other qbs like Dobbs and Easton stick were flat out unwatchable |
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I think we can mostly agree that players should not play through serious concussions. As long as you enforce that rule the defense gets a huge advantage because they can hit stick a player out of the game. People can get mad about defenseless WR rules all they want but to me it's a cheap way to win games by knocking great players out. And that is only 1 game. Even more important when you lose guys for the whole season or ruin careers. 18 teams last year finished the season with a backup qb starting due to injury.hard to imagine how anyone think that is less of a problem than not seeing a few guys tackle freely |
Is this the tackle that gave patrick the high ankle sprain?
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The last thing we need is another 15 yard penalty with a first down for the refs to use to control the outcome of the game. |
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Just make it flag football already. |
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Now you can't use your weight to bring down a player. What should a cb do to tackle someone bigger than him? What about gang tackles? Almost all of them use weight to stop the runner. Meanwhile, offensive players can stiff arms to the face. Something that really can't be defended and pop a defenders head back. They can chop out legs one on one. They are going to remove the excitement from the game. They need to balance rules.. If this passes then players should be down where wrapped up. Make it flag. As I have stated before. They would be safer with getting rid of helmets and pads. Go rugby. Leather small pads and leather helmets. |
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Man this thread is amazing. I guess tackling is woke now???
Not my NFL |
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The NFLPA has chimed in...
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Our statement on the swivel hip-drop tackle. <a href="https://t.co/8mzhjtPgKu">pic.twitter.com/8mzhjtPgKu</a></p>— NFLPA (@NFLPA) <a href="https://twitter.com/NFLPA/status/1770559945055916058?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 20, 2024</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> |
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I think you’re making a mountain of a molehill here. |
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The NFL has banned the hip-drop tackle, source said. The Competition Committee was unanimous on it.</p>— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) <a href="https://twitter.com/RapSheet/status/1772275118460309886?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 25, 2024</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
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This is going to be subjective as hell, but we have Mahomes.
I can’t wait for this to benefit us in a key moment. The tears will be amazing. Hopefully it’s against the Bills. |
We should all prepare to be Furious with George.
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This is just as big of a development…
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">This is big: NFL Competition Committee Chairman Rich McKay told me the replay assistant will now be permitted to correct certain types of incorrect calls for roughing the passer and intentional grounding.<br><br>Must be purely objective (QB wasn’t hit in head, was out of pocket, etc.)</p>— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) <a href="https://twitter.com/TomPelissero/status/1772292176904437981?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 25, 2024</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> |
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Here’s the video the NFL just showed in a press conference of what are now banned swivel hip-drop tackles (with NFL executive Jeff Miller speaking in the background). <a href="https://t.co/Y4H8h6pQkW">pic.twitter.com/Y4H8h6pQkW</a></p>— Tom Pelissero (@TomPelissero) <a href="https://twitter.com/TomPelissero/status/1772285073120711025?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 25, 2024</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
Here's the video they showed of what is now considered an illegal tackle. |
So if you're in the process of getting tackled you can just try and get your legs in a position so the defender will come down on you..and you get an automatic 15 yards. Okay?
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Dude most of those looked completely fine. This shit is beyond ridiculous.
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anything that keeps mahomes and kelce safer is fine with me
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So you're telling me when I launch my little body at Mr. Henry's waist and he trucks me so hard I end up flying around his body while clinging to his ass cheeks for dear life and landing on his legs, I get a 15 yard penalty? |
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So early on you make a bunch of mistakes enforcing the rule but over time defenses will figure out how to tackle differently and refs will find the happy medium. |
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Some of those tackles . . . well, I ask you, just what are those defenders supposed to do? The ball-carrier is getting past them; are they just supposed to let the guy run by them because they might end up 'drop-tackling' them?
Personally, I'm not a fan of the drop tackle. but we live in an age where everyone on a football field knows the risks and is required to be able to protect themselves, except defensive players. Defensive players must also protect offensive players, that are doing their level best to make tackling them as hard as possible (for what should be obvious reasons). Man, I miss the days when nearly (punters/kickers excepted) all players were responsible for their own safety. The double standard, with increasing bias against the defense, is going to eventually kill this game. |
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I mean, how do you even enforce something like that looking at those examples? Yet another 'subjective' call we're going to willingly put in the hands of borderline incompetent officials to call whenever they 'feel' like calling it. And, of course, it won't be reviewable. Yea. Another way to piss off fanbases and make game deciding calls on complete B.S. This will end well for the NFL and the fans. :rolleyes: |
It looks over enforced because it is over enforced. The NFL obviously wanted more offense/scoring so they began creating all these penalties against the defense, and now, well, here we are.
This isn't some fleeting thing; it's getting worse. And it's significantly effecting how the game is played. We've got QBs being coached to fake slide, then try to take off, putting defenders in an impossible bind, so they hesitate. In a game where hesitation is a sin. JFC, in the last few years we've had how many flags for 'tackling too hard'? People complain about poor tackling and overall defensive play, but conveniently omit the fact that defenses are being asked to not only do their jobs at an NFL level, but also do more to protect offensive players than they do for themselves. It's freaking stupid. |
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The best thing the nfl can do is to keep great players on the field to the best of their ability. And this is a very big problem for the nfl right now. Soft tackling is WAY better to watch than Blaine gabbert playing for a month or longer. |
It's only going to get worse unless the fans come together to tell their owners to vote in the interest of the game of football rather than their own self interest.
All it takes to get a rule change is for a few nerds to deliver a PowerPoint with some graphs that show X play causes injuries every year. Then the owners natural response is "Injuries? Hell I don't like injuries. We had too many of them last year. Let's change the rule damnit!". |
NFL gonna be a glorified flag league within 20yrs lol.
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So, was last season an outlier or the norm? Because just saying that "13 teams were starting backup QBs," without any context isn't very compelling, or at least it shouldn't be. And how many of those QBs were injured by drop tackles? Just wondering, because I know at least a couple top-tier QBs were injured in no-contact situations. I get wanting to keep great players on the field, but we've watched things decline to the point where DEs are hugging QBs instead of tackling them. And LBs/DBs are holding up instead of tackling running QBs for fear of drawing yet another idiotic flag (and a hefty fine from the league). And at the end of the day, football is a violent extremely physical sport and injuries are going to happen. If you're that concerned about largely accidental injuries, maybe we really should just take the pads off and put the flags on and just play little girl football instead. |
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And these injuries have been impactful. We’re talking playoff players like dak, tyreek, pollard, Andrews. I agree there is a right way to do this. And I’m guessing the league will see that this enforcement is way too broad. The nfl as with all other restrictions that supposedly were going to end the league always finds ways to adapt. Create a clearer and much more limited definition, teach way better tackling technique and adapt from there. |
I haven't been paying close attention to this, but I'm a little surprised to see people against banning the tackle type that almost cost us a Super Bowl. It seems like every time this kind of tackle happens the player is getting hurt, so it won't bother me to see them come down on it.
As for the arguments that they're ruining the game by eliminating offense or whatever, that doesn't make a ton of sense to me. The NFL is more popular than ever after two decades of neutering defenses. You can have your 7-6 final score games - I'll take offensive excitement. |
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If there are recent rule changes that eliminate low blocks outside the tight end box and on kickoff and punt returns that apply to offense and defense, it is natural that landing on the back of a runner's legs can be addressed also. Especially with high profile plays of specific injuries recently. |
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Dak isn't a great QB. He's pretty freaking average. He just plays for a very visible organization. If he was playing for LAC or CAR, no one would give two shits about that guy. Hell, he might be out of the league a long time ago in those situations. And while I could go on about the way these rules are enforced, the problem is a lot deeper than that, imo. OL play is pretty mediocre across the league, probably due in large part to the lack of real padded practices/the reduction of preseason games/teams being unwilling to play starters in those preseason games. And then there's the simple fact that the NFL has been cooking the rules for years now to allow mediocre QBs to be starters. QBs that can't read defensive alignments pre-snap so consequently don't make proper protection adjustments (or just never do it at all), that aren't big enough to play in the NFL, or just throw their receivers into dangerous situations on a weekly basis. Point being, it's the quality of play that's the bigger issue when it comes to injuries, not how defenders are tackling. Making it harder for defenses to play isn't going to fix things. Making QBs, receivers and OLs better at their jobs would do more to protect players, imo. |
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Well, that's kind of my point. The game itself is descending into mediocrity, because the league offices value flash and speed and scoring over quality play. Which is how we get QBs like Lamar/Tua/Hurts/whoever getting $200+ million, when in 1980 (or the '90s), they probably wouldn't last more than a couple seasons, because no team would see them as a true elite QBs that could get them to the SB. |
Unlikely to effect outcomes much as they plan to enforce through fines, not flags.
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I agree offenses will eventually need to take some responsibility too. But tackling is a very big thing too. I would much rather see DBs for example wrap up, tackle and play the ball versus guys like Cisco who constantly use hit sticking guys as a crutch. Yeah I was way more outraged of defenses routinely knocking juju and Mvs out of games 2 years ago than I was at ever the thought they might stop guys like Cisco from doing it. |
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Go back to that clip above. Look at :03/:13 seconds just as examples. You're the DB: tell me what the proper way is to tackle that guy in those two examples please. I mean, I only played a couple years in HS, and was never more than a backup/utility player, so you tell me; how is he supposed to tackle those players 'properly' without doing what he did in both cases. |
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2) Slow the player down and wait for help. I don't think anyone's arguing that this could result in a few extra yards. That's no different than essentially every safety-related change they've made to the game, and yet we're all still watching. |
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Well, yeah. Especially Tua. Dude is just fragile. Add in the fact that he isn't mobile, can't seem to execute a timing pass with any consistency, is below average throwing outside the numbers . . . he wouldn't have even been good enough to keep as a backup at the time. Probably never gets drafted. |
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One of those is Sneed, I believe; he's as fast as it gets in the secondary, so 'taking a better angle,' doesn't really fly for me there. 'Slow the player down and wait for help'? Are you serious? Should he try to make small talk then? Ask him out on a date? |
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Again, look at the tape and explain how the defense is supposed to make those tackles? I mean I get it’s a dangerous tackle. What I don’t get is exactly how the defenders are supposed to make those tackles differently without giving up more yards or possibly even a TD. |
NOOOOOOO!!! Hip drop tackles are what made me a fan!
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This is a pretty interesting video looking at it from a rugby perspective. The main theme is just trying to avoid tackles that put lots of pressure on the knees and lower body. Football is of course a different animal but a lot of interesting thoughts here. Every time I see a guys legs pinned under with upper body twisting I cringe. |
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