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NFL owners approve new 2021 rules for replay, onside kicks
https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/...es-2021-season
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Easier onside kicks. That's big.
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Replay ref in the ear of the field referee could be big. Wonder how many late flags right at the end of a play get thrown after the booth guy says "hey you missed"...
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So does that mean any time a ball is kicked the receiving team can't have more than 9 players within 25 yards?
That's the only way I can envision this working out seamlessly to allow for fake kickoffs and such. If it means a different formation depending on whether or not the kicking team is attempting an onside kick, there dies another part of the game we all love. At least they're not doing that reeruned "You can attempt to convert a 4th and 15!" thing. That would have been such a clunky rule. I don't care if the Chiefs would have gained from it. It makes zero ****ing sense. |
Hill peace sign is out.
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I also thought it was interesting that they mentioned this was happening unofficially already. I seem to recall a play with the Chiefs where a call was reversed well after a play was over, and it was not officially reviewed |
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Changed a rule that will now force a loss of down if two passes are completed behind the line of scrimmage.
What does that actually mean..If a team throws it behind the line on 2nd and 3rd down they lose 4th down? |
What the **** does this mean?
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“ . As a result, the Philadelphia Eagles tabled a proposal that would have given teams an option to gain 15 yards on one offensive play from their own 25-yard line to retain possession after a score.”
I like this idea. I think it would make close games much more exciting, but I can already see a team getting screwed on a phantom PI or defensive hold. |
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This rule was suggested by the Rams. In last season's Bucs-Rams game, Tom Brady threw a pass that didn't go beyond the line of scrimmage and bounced back to him, so he threw it to another player behind the line of scrimmage. This rule will make that second pass behind the line of scrimmage illegal and result in a loss of down, regardless of how many yards the second receiver has gained. |
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...and thanks!
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The rules on player numbers is going to cause some ****ups when defenses get in the wrong personnel package.
Mark my words, some dipshit is going to mistake a WR wearing 40 for a FB and it will be 6. |
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Yeah I'm totally lost on this take. I'm pretty sure by the time the regular season rolls around the receivers can all have the same number and the starting QB will still know which guys he wants to prioritize in his first two reads.
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Might be even worse if offenses try to take advantage and line the WR up in the backfield. |
so buy buy any pass backs on last second chances... basically you cant lateral backwards if you are behind the line of scrimmage.
So you cant check down on a flea flicker? |
They're talking about the play where Brady threw a pass, it was batted back to him and then he threw it again.
There was a penalty, but all that mean was it was 3 & 15 instead of 3&5. LA wanted to be certain if something like that happened again, it was a 10 yard penalty and loss of down, just like intentional grounding. |
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You know, tragedy + time = humor. Is it too soon? |
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Still dunno if I agree that'll be a thing. Does it happen in college? |
So an onside attempt is now a 9 on 11 situation?
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Thing is that makes sense to stop "two" passes behind the LOS as if on a batted back to the QB situations.. but in the event a defense doesn't smoke the second passer: it effectively bans otherwise legal trick play passes in the offensive backfield.. |
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edave's youtube channel when people are mean to alex smith: <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/Dsceq8G1JoU" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/YlhvS0Ea2N4?start=4" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
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I really wish they would one day deal with the issue of how penalties are enforced in the sense of balance. What I mean is a 5 yard penalty shouldn't offset a 15 yard one. I am fine with in a situation like that where the beneficiary of the 15 yard penalty gets only 10 yards instead.
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I still want DPI to be a flat 15 yard penalty instead of the spot foul shit.
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The emphasis on taunting is going to be painful, could be a lot of game changing penalties for some truly basic crap.
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Of course, no rule change is going to matter until they make a rule that refs can't call fake defensive holding penalties in Tom Brady's favor. |
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Under the old rules, the kicking team had like a 10-15% chance to recover. The year before the rule change it was actually 21%. I would vote for it to revert back to the old rules.
But if they implement the new rule where you have to get 15 yards, that would be a great advantage for Mahomes, so by all means.... |
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NFL is truly the no fun league. |
Imagine that. Tom Brady is a whiny bitch about everything.
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Kickers/punters around the NFL today <a href="https://t.co/rx8z3dKU57">pic.twitter.com/rx8z3dKU57</a></p>— Brandon Thorn (@BrandonThornNFL) <a href="https://twitter.com/BrandonThornNFL/status/1384960238101712899?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 21, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
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I'm not sure why the NFL is so intent on taunting. These are grown, men. Just make sure they know they can retaliate. A little taunting actually fires people up and makes the game more physical.
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Get it now? |
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I hate this.
Approved a one-year experiment in an attempt to make it easier to recover onside kicks. In 2021, the receiving team on kickoffs will be limited to nine players within 25 yards of the ball. Last season, NFL teams recovered only three of 67 onside kicks, the lowest total and recovery rate since at least 2001. As a result, the Philadelphia Eagles tabled a proposal that would have given teams an option to gain 15 yards on one offensive play from their own 25-yard line to retain possession after a score. Just roll dice and create an automatic turnover. It would have as much basis in the skill of players as making onside kicks successful more frequently. |
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If Tom Brady actually gave a shit about good football, he would have killed himself years ago.
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LMAO LMAO |
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They should implement the rule change where they enforce the rules equally for all teams
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One rule change I'd like to see, and don't know if ever been brought up (I'd have to think so at some point in the history of football): The automatic first down given on defensive penalties.
If it were me, instead of the automatic first down, I'd give the penalty yardage and a repeat of the previous down. If the yardage results in a first down being obtained, then fine, but if it doesn't, you repeat the down. Nothing infuriates me more than when there is 5 yard defensive holding call on a corner away from the ball 3rd and 15 that gives a new set of down. Under my scenario, they assess the 5 yards and repeat 3rd down (which is now 3rd and 10).....a yeah, I don't even like it when it benefits the Chiefs....I think it's simply a bad football rule. Maybe I'm missing something, but I'd like to hear the compelling argument for why the automatic first down is even a thing. EDIT: This goes for Pass Interference as well. I'm OK with the spot of the foul placement, but if that spot doesn't result in a first down, then you repeat the down again. So, if it's 3rd and 15 at the offenses own 30 yard line, and the PI occurs at the 40 yard line, after the penalty, it would be 3rd and 5 at the 40 |
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