Statcruncher
Footballguy
Here's the play again, what's your take?
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That is the topic that spawned this one. It seems biased and the topic poll was about fines/suspensions only. It didn't explore whether people thought it was intentional, illegal, or what made it legal/illegal. This poll should give us a better feeling of what people are thinkingI feel like I've seen something like this right on the first page a few topics down before.
http://forums.footba...howtopic=669229
That is the topic that spawned this one. It seems biased and the topic poll was about fines/suspensions only. It didn't explore whether people thought it was intentional, illegal, or what made it legal/illegal. This poll should give us a better feeling of what people are thinkingI feel like I've seen something like this right on the first page a few topics down before.
http://forums.footba...howtopic=669229
So you think my poll is eerily similar to yours?That is the topic that spawned this one. It seems biased and the topic poll was about fines/suspensions only. It didn't explore whether people thought it was intentional, illegal, or what made it legal/illegal. This poll should give us a better feeling of what people are thinkingI feel like I've seen something like this right on the first page a few topics down before.
http://forums.footba...howtopic=669229
...or are eerily similar to the "biased" poll.
I included far more options which drill down into people's perceptions of the play and simply said "what's your take?" instead of leading off with biased comments, but if you want to call them eerily similar I guess you can.'DoubleG said:He clearly launches and seems to seek the head. Louis is now out for the season. IMHO, Jared Allen should be suspended for a clear and obvious deliberate attempt to injure another player.
ETA: Mike Pereira stated that it was an illegal blind-side block on Fox.
Should he be fined or suspended?
[ ] Nothing should be done
[ ] He should be fined
[ ] He should be fined and suspended
No - but the results are. About 70% calling the hit illegal - and about 75% calling for a fine or fine and suspension. So if somehow breaking it up makes you feel better that's cool. But the concept that it was legal and should not be punished is still clearly a position held by the minority - at about the same percentage in your poll and mine.So you think my poll is eerily similar to yours?That is the topic that spawned this one. It seems biased and the topic poll was about fines/suspensions only. It didn't explore whether people thought it was intentional, illegal, or what made it legal/illegal. This poll should give us a better feeling of what people are thinkingI feel like I've seen something like this right on the first page a few topics down before.
http://forums.footba...howtopic=669229
...or are eerily similar to the "biased" poll.
Why do you keep trying to "win" this situation? It's not about winning, it's about really wanting to know what people think and why. Your poll left alot of unanswered questions so I created a different one that allows people to put a reason with their selections. Common sense dictates that both polls would show roughly the same percentages in favor of a fine/suspension, I just wanted better insight into the reasoning behind people's opinions as well. For example of the ones that voted for fine/no fine, 11% think it's a legal hit but he will get fined while 9% think it's illegal and he won't get fined. 20% think that he won't be correctly punished. Sorry if I stole your thunder or whatever.No - but the results are. About 70% calling the hit illegal - and about 75% calling for a fine or fine and suspension. So if somehow breaking it up makes you feel better that's cool. But the concept that it was legal and should not be punished is still clearly a position held by the minority - at about the same percentage in your poll and mine.So you think my poll is eerily similar to yours?That is the topic that spawned this one. It seems biased and the topic poll was about fines/suspensions only. It didn't explore whether people thought it was intentional, illegal, or what made it legal/illegal. This poll should give us a better feeling of what people are thinkingI feel like I've seen something like this right on the first page a few topics down before.
http://forums.footba...howtopic=669229
...or are eerily similar to the "biased" poll.
Issue is that people don't know the rules and just have a gut reaction on what they THINK instead of actually knowing the rules.Out of these 7 options only 1 of them is always illegal.No - but the results are. About 70% calling the hit illegal - and about 75% calling for a fine or fine and suspension. So if somehow breaking it up makes you feel better that's cool. But the concept that it was legal and should not be punished is still clearly a position held by the minority - at about the same percentage in your poll and mine.So you think my poll is eerily similar to yours?That is the topic that spawned this one. It seems biased and the topic poll was about fines/suspensions only. It didn't explore whether people thought it was intentional, illegal, or what made it legal/illegal. This poll should give us a better feeling of what people are thinkingI feel like I've seen something like this right on the first page a few topics down before.
http://forums.footba...howtopic=669229
...or are eerily similar to the "biased" poll.
Easy there Sparky - I'm not trying to win anything. It's cool - my thunder is very much intact. I'm actually curious about the 3 people who voted the hit was illegal but that the NFL wont do anything. That seems an odd position in today's NFL.Why do you keep trying to "win" this situation? It's not about winning, it's about really wanting to know what people think and why. Your poll left alot of unanswered questions so I created a different one that allows people to put a reason with their selections. Common sense dictates that both polls would show roughly the same percentages in favor of a fine/suspension, I just wanted better insight into the reasoning behind people's opinions as well. For example of the ones that voted for fine/no fine, 11% think it's a legal hit but he will get fined while 9% think it's illegal and he won't get fined. 20% think that he won't be correctly punished. Sorry if I stole your thunder or whatever.
Title of the thread down?'Raiderfan32904 said:
Title of the thread down?'Raiderfan32904 said:
It's very odd.. you are a lot more likely to get fined for a legal hit than you are to not be fined for an illegal one.'DoubleG said:Easy there Sparky - I'm not trying to win anything. It's cool - my thunder is very much intact. I'm actually curious about the 3 people who voted the hit was illegal but that the NFL wont do anything. That seems an odd position in today's NFL.Why do you keep trying to "win" this situation? It's not about winning, it's about really wanting to know what people think and why. Your poll left alot of unanswered questions so I created a different one that allows people to put a reason with their selections. Common sense dictates that both polls would show roughly the same percentages in favor of a fine/suspension, I just wanted better insight into the reasoning behind people's opinions as well. For example of the ones that voted for fine/no fine, 11% think it's a legal hit but he will get fined while 9% think it's illegal and he won't get fined. 20% think that he won't be correctly punished. Sorry if I stole your thunder or whatever.
In the NHL, there is no game.In the NHL, that's a fine and a game.
I understand this is a boring and annoying subject, but how the NFL rules on these plays is shaping the future of contact in the league. The fabric of the game is being changed by these plays.Where is the "I don't care, I'm tired of every hit being over analyzed, football is a collision sport not a contact sport, you can't even fathom the speed at which NFL football is played" option?
Good to know I'm not the only person who thought this thread was gonna be about the first active openly gay player in the NFL...am kinda disappointed actuallySo hes gay?
Haven't heard a wording. Probably decided it was enough into the head/neck to qualify, if I had to guess.Can anyone find why he was fined? I mean obviously it was for the hit, but does anyone have the wording of what exactly triggered the fine? Did they see it as helmet to helmet or what?
The NFL's goal is to defend a player who can't see a big hit coming, so can't protect himself. Which way he's moving isn't the issue in such a play. It's whether he's facing a direction that he can see the hit coming. Most of the dangerous plays like this the rule is meant to deal with, the player IS moving one direction but facing another. Louis's upper body is twisted partway to look back up field. Allen's coming from the side relative to that, where he can't be seen. That's the definition of the situation the rule is meant to address.These are only illegal if you verify that the player is hit directly from the side or behind and is then deemed defenseless, since the Bears player was hit from the direction of his movement this is not the case...
Well, at least those teams aren't like the Saints who had an actual bounty program for such.Guess some "physical" teams have players who actively try to knock out opposing players. Sometimes fumbles, wins and profit result.And it's legal, approved and even rewarded.