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The Power Five => Big Ten => Topic started by: ELA on July 16, 2018, 08:03:51 AM

Title: 2018 OT Tourney (1st Round) - Targeting vs. Play Clock Modifications
Post by: ELA on July 16, 2018, 08:03:51 AM
SYSTEMIC CHANGES
End of TV monopoly
Recruiting coverage
Early NFL Draft entry
SYSTEM RULE CHANGES
Academic ineligibility
CFP
Conference championship games
GAME RULE CHANGES
OT
Narrower hashmarks
Tearaway jerseys banned
GAME PLAY CHANGES
Wishbone
SEC integration
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Title: Re: 2018 OT Tourney (1st Round) - Targeting vs. Play Clock Modifications
Post by: ELA on July 16, 2018, 08:41:30 AM
I feel bad for the players who played when we knew so little, and those who played when the powers that be buried the info they were starting to get about the dangers of concussions deserve whatever they have coming to them now.  And while player safety is important, we know now how dangerous concussions are, that there seems like an assumed risk.  And while I think some obvious targeting penalties are appropriate, it seems to me like over half are good football plays where pad level changed or a helmet inadvertently came up, and suddenly a kid is ejected?  I hate it.
Title: Re: 2018 OT Tourney (1st Round) - Targeting vs. Play Clock Modifications
Post by: betarhoalphadelta on July 16, 2018, 01:57:13 PM
I voted for targeting, if for no other reason that it's an attempt to protect players, and that a lot of the clock modifications they've made are to speed up the game and reduce number of plays run. I don't quite understand why if we love this game so much we're trying to make it shorter...

However, I think targeting is lipstick on a pig. The issue isn't concussions, it's CTE. And that's not going away from targeting penalties, or IMHO from anything else. 
Title: Re: 2018 OT Tourney (1st Round) - Targeting vs. Play Clock Modifications
Post by: OrangeAfroMan on July 16, 2018, 05:38:05 PM
The targeting rules have been a failure - not that having a targeting call isn't a good thing, it is.  But the implementation and the punishments have been bizarre.  Suspending a player for half of the next game?  No.  Flagging it when a QB slides down at the last split-second?  No.  

As with all judgment calls, it's been all over the place.  Instead of erring on the side of penalizing it no matter what, we need to understand that sometimes a play will result in the act of what the targeting penalty describes, but should not be penalized.