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Should the Tush Push play be banned? (4 Viewers)

Should The Tush Push Play Be Banned?

  • Definitely Should Be Banned

  • Probably Should Be Banned

  • On The Fence

  • Probably Should Not Be Banned

  • Definitely Should Not Be Banned


Results are only viewable after voting.
I mean, most of the reasons people have given to ban the play are nonsense. But the refs being consistently and completely incapable of officiating it seems to at least be a legit argument. In a perfect world the refs would just get good at their jobs, of course in a perfect world refereeing NFL games wouldn't be a side hustle for lawyers and dentists.

How so? Because it seems most of the reasons ARE legit. Or is this a case of "you don't agree with me so your reasons are nonsense"?
NONE of the reasons (to date) are legitimate.  NO, I do not agree with you at all. YES, your reasons for eliminating the play are nonsense. Blithering nonsense. But hey, keep crying about it if it makes you feel better.

Officiating is a LEAGUE issue. It is the NFL's job to fix the officiating. Not the team running a play the officials have problems with. Eliminating this play because part-time officials are having issues with it is not the way to deal with it.

I wonder if full-time officials with no outside distractions (such as a Dental Practice or whatever they do full-time now) would be better able to deal with such an adversarial play as a QB Sneak?
That's not how this works. You need to explain what reasons and why. And are you familiar with my argument? You specify "your reasons" but don't elaborate on what you think MY reasons are. Instead, you just go straight for the personal attacks.

"I don't like anyone's reasons but my own or the ones that favor my team" is not a valid or legitimate argument. IF that is your reason, then fine, but it's not based in any form of truth or logic. You would have more justification and respect if you just admitted to blind homerism as your reasoning as opposed to dismissing all but your own arguments as "blathering nonsense".
dude stop with this straw man argument. Zero people on either side of this debate say that. Literally 0.0. Enough.

The main reasons to ban the play I see here and elsewhere are as follows:

1. Safety issue.
2. Aesthetic issue. The play is “ugly to watch”.
3. “Not a football play”
4. Hard to officiate.
5. Pushing the ball carrier isn’t fair.

1. has been so thoroughly debunked it’s laughable. There is nothing but evidence to the contrary on this one over the last 3-4 years of the Eagles running it and precisely no injuries coming out of it. Statistically it’s probably one of the safest plays.

2. Totally subjective. I love the play, how it looks and the fait accompli that surrounds the opposing defense. Banning a play on purely subjective grounds should not happen.

3. It’s eleven football players, lining up on the line of scrimmage and matriculating the ball over the first down marker to move the sticks or across the goal line to score a TD. I assure you, this is a football play made by football players.

4. Sorry, but that’s not the problem of the team running it. It’s a problem of officiating. Get better at officiating it.

5. This one I can at least see the point with, however, pushing the ball carrier IS A LEGAL PLAY. If you want to make that illegal, fine, but until that happens this is a perfectly legal play and banning it while not addressing the underlying issue seems to be more targeting the one team that does a play well.
 
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If a defensive player isn't allowed to climb the back of a lineman to block a field goal, then why should a player be allowed to push a ball carrier?
Because the first example isn't allowed in the rules and the second example currently is allowed in the rules. Its what I said, you want to remove that provision in the rules, go for it; just know that the pushing a player rule was changed in '05 because, wait for it.....it was too hard to officiate. My point is that as long as THAT rule is in force, banning the specific tush push play seems punitive to one team.
 
One really quick thing. When the NFL locked the refs out, I believe it was the league—yes, the NFL—that wanted the officials to begin to become full-time employees. But the referees didn’t want that. I’m gonna go back and make sure, but I know I’ve read this a bunch of times, and it’s not by league sycophants.

You can say the NFL was being penurious and wanted them to be rated and ranked differently with incentives and such for good officials, and you can take labor’s side on this and call the NFL cheap or greedy (they often are), but in all seriousness I don’t think this is the issue to lead with when it comes to that. I think they wanted the officials to answer to them fully and be full-time. It was the refs, generally decent but often really missing some blatant calls, that wanted the autonomy and free time.

OMG buddy I am the president of the fanclub about this for the last 10+ years. I will send you an invite.

 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
More stuff should be reviewable. I think the refs are let off the hook because of plays that aren’t.
 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
This is incorrect and its what I alluded to earlier. There have been 3 or 4 examples this year where their new RG jumps a millisecond before the ball is snapped. You need slow motion camera work to catch it. These examples have been exagerated into statements like the above to suggest that this happens all the time and that it is part of the play design. They have run this play 100's of times going back to multiple years when Kelce was still on the line and this never happened. To be clear, they do not need the millisecond jump for this to be successful. Jumping offsides is not part of the play design. It has happened a handful of times, not anywhere near every time like what is stated above.
 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
This is incorrect and its what I alluded to earlier. There have been 3 or 4 examples this year where their new RG jumps a millisecond before the ball is snapped. You need slow motion camera work to catch it. These examples have been exagerated into statements like the above to suggest that this happens all the time and that it is part of the play design. They have run this play 100's of times going back to multiple years when Kelce was still on the line and this never happened. To be clear, they do not need the millisecond jump for this to be successful. Jumping offsides is not part of the play design. It has happened a handful of times, not anywhere near every time like what is stated above.
But the fumble. Dam-it, what about the fumble? Let’s talk about the fumble.
 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
This is incorrect and its what I alluded to earlier. There have been 3 or 4 examples this year where their new RG jumps a millisecond before the ball is snapped. You need slow motion camera work to catch it. These examples have been exagerated into statements like the above to suggest that this happens all the time and that it is part of the play design. They have run this play 100's of times going back to multiple years when Kelce was still on the line and this never happened. To be clear, they do not need the millisecond jump for this to be successful. Jumping offsides is not part of the play design. It has happened a handful of times, not anywhere near every time like what is stated above.
Then it sounds like if they do it no harm no foul. But it sure would be nice to catch the false starts and the holds when they do happen.
 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
This is incorrect and it’s what I alluded to earlier. There have been 3 or 4 examples this year where their new RG jumps a millisecond before the ball is snapped. You need slow motion camera work to catch it. These examples have been exagerated into statements like the above to suggest that this happens all the time and that it is part of the play design. They have run this play 100's of times going back to multiple years when Kelce was still on the line and this never happened. To be clear, they do not need the millisecond jump for this to be successful. Jumping offsides is not part of the play design. It has happened a handful of times, not anywhere near every time like what is stated above.
This may be true, but 3-4 offsides calls would effectively kill the advantage of this play over another short yardage approach. The whole point of the play is that it doesn’t lose yards and doesn’t risk a turnover 🙈

Before agreeing to make offsides reviewable, I’d like to know how often a player jumps a millisecond early on non-tush push plays. I’d bet it happens a lot and really doesn’t impact the outcome enough to warrant the wasted time and energy to review and reset. I’d hate to have a 80 yard run called back because upon review you see someone move early in super slow mo.
 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
This is incorrect and it’s what I alluded to earlier. There have been 3 or 4 examples this year where their new RG jumps a millisecond before the ball is snapped. You need slow motion camera work to catch it. These examples have been exagerated into statements like the above to suggest that this happens all the time and that it is part of the play design. They have run this play 100's of times going back to multiple years when Kelce was still on the line and this never happened. To be clear, they do not need the millisecond jump for this to be successful. Jumping offsides is not part of the play design. It has happened a handful of times, not anywhere near every time like what is stated above.
This may be true, but 3-4 offsides calls would effectively kill the advantage of this play over another short yardage approach. The whole point of the play is that it doesn’t lose yards and doesn’t risk a turnover 🙈

Before agreeing to make offsides reviewable, I’d like to know how often a player jumps a millisecond early on non-tush push plays. I’d bet it happens a lot and really doesn’t impact the outcome enough to warrant the wasted time and energy to review and reset. I’d hate to have a 80 yard run called back because upon review you see someone move early in super slow mo.
Jawaan Taylor jumps more than a millisecond on every pass play :)
 
I’d like to see how the Eagles respond if it’s banned. Let’s use Mailata on short yardage as a fullback. Still unstoppable but more enjoyable.
 
I’d like to see how the Eagles respond if it’s banned. Let’s use Mailata on short yardage as a fullback. Still unstoppable but more enjoyable.

Ehh....they're going to be in trouble if they do ban it. Hurts is going to have to figure out how to get in the endzone w/out assistance. That's a tall task.
 
I’d like to see how the Eagles respond if it’s banned. Let’s use Mailata on short yardage as a fullback. Still unstoppable but more enjoyable.

Ehh....they're going to be in trouble if they do ban it. Hurts is going to have to figure out how to get in the endzone w/out assistance. That's a tall task.
Eagles have scored 26 TDs this year. Five were Jalen running. But only 3 have been tush push. And two of those were on first and goal from the one. I think they’ll be ok.
 
I think most people would be ok with it if it were officiated properly, because the play would almost never work. I haven't seen a successful one yet where there wasn't some flinching by the OL prior to the ball being snapped.

Just have a cameraman lined up down the line and make it eligible for booth review flags. "After booth assist - False Start - big dumb guard - ball will be placed at the 6, repeat 1st down".

That play would disappear, and everyone would be happy. Play hasn't been outlawed, but no one will run it.
This is incorrect and its what I alluded to earlier. There have been 3 or 4 examples this year where their new RG jumps a millisecond before the ball is snapped. You need slow motion camera work to catch it. These examples have been exagerated into statements like the above to suggest that this happens all the time and that it is part of the play design. They have run this play 100's of times going back to multiple years when Kelce was still on the line and this never happened. To be clear, they do not need the millisecond jump for this to be successful. Jumping offsides is not part of the play design. It has happened a handful of times, not anywhere near every time like what is stated above.
Then it sounds like if they do it no harm no foul. But it sure would be nice to catch the false starts and the holds when they do happen.
Agreed. I’d say calling the fumble a fumble would be correct as well.
 
I’d like to see how the Eagles respond if it’s banned. Let’s use Mailata on short yardage as a fullback. Still unstoppable but more enjoyable.

Ehh....they're going to be in trouble if they do ban it. Hurts is going to have to figure out how to get in the endzone w/out assistance. That's a tall task.
Eagles have scored 26 TDs this year. Five were Jalen running. But only 3 have been tush push. And two of those were on first and goal from the one. I think they’ll be ok.

I watched a couple youtubes a while back that show 20-30 minutes of tush-push plays over and over, and one of my takeaways was that the push from behind isn't very important to the play. In many cases Hurts gets the yardage on his first dive into the pile, but often needs that 2nd or 3rd effort. I rarely get the impression the push from behind makes any real difference and I don't think banning the 'push' part of the play would make much difference if any. The main defining aspect of this play for me is the way the Eagles block it, which is different than a normal QB sneak. The majority of the time, 2 or 3 Eagles OLs go to ground at the snap, with other blockers and Hurts running the play directly over the top of the players on the ground. The notion of 'forward progress' is a big messy gray area on this play because of the way they run it. The QB has a knee and a hand down on the backs of his OL and he's stopped, but he's not on the ground and they all keep grinding. This is what makes the fumble non-call so egregious because they are giving him the benefit both ways - allowing the play to continue indefinitely but then also saying its no longer live when he fumbles. The Eagles linemen lining up offside and moving early is a crucial aspect of the play's success in order for them to get in low and get the platform set up. I am against banning the play - I think that is an extremely lazy and likely counter-productive way to solve this problem (if there is one). The 'problem' is all about the officials doing their job. It may be a hard job to do on this particular play but I can't understand why the NFL didn't do a better job of training and preparing for it this season.
 
Conspiracy theory time: are they purposely botching calls for more ammo to get it banned this coming off season? They did not officiate the play this horrifically last season.
I don’t think making bad calls is intentional as much as a natural consequence of an increased scrutiny and the league telling the refs to look for 1000 different things.

For instance, I wouldn’t be surprised if the refs were told to be quick with the whistle to minimize extra pushes which in turn led to the play getting blown dead on the fumble. Irony.
 
Conspiracy theory time: are they purposely botching calls for more ammo to get it banned this coming off season? They did not officiate the play this horrifically last season.
I don’t think making bad calls is intentional as much as a natural consequence of an increased scrutiny and the league telling the refs to look for 1000 different things.

For instance, I wouldn’t be surprised if the refs were told to be quick with the whistle to minimize extra pushes which in turn led to the play getting blown dead on the fumble. Irony.
I live in Delaware, so I get to watch all of the Eagles games week in and week out. They are not my favorite team, but I do like them and will root for them over any other team other than Chicago. All that being said, they are getting away with murder.
I was against getting rid of the play last year. I've reversed that this year and it's mostly because of how bad the refs are officiating it.
 
Conspiracy theory time: are they purposely botching calls for more ammo to get it banned this coming off season? They did not officiate the play this horrifically last season.
I don’t think making bad calls is intentional as much as a natural consequence of an increased scrutiny and the league telling the refs to look for 1000 different things.

For instance, I wouldn’t be surprised if the refs were told to be quick with the whistle to minimize extra pushes which in turn led to the play getting blown dead on the fumble. Irony.
I live in Delaware, so I get to watch all of the Eagles games week in and week out. They are not my favorite team, but I do like them and will root for them over any other team other than Chicago. All that being said, they are getting away with murder.
I was against getting rid of the play last year. I've reversed that this year and it's mostly because of how bad the refs are officiating it.
That’s where I am at as well. I’m also pretty certain it will be gone next year.
 
OMG buddy I am the president of the fanclub about this for the last 10+ years. I will send you an invite.

LOL. Free, that’s being on top of it. I might have even gotten it from you or GroveDiesel, the more I think about it. There are a lot of things that I learn here that just by osmosis (it’s not a selfish impulse nor nefarious, I swear—usually I make sure to give credit and will @ people I’ve gotten my thoughts from) or unconscious absorption and it goes unattributed. Something spurred me to look that up.

Good on you and GroveDiesel for paying attention to the negotiations and seeing it through and seeing through the narrative.
 
Revisiting because it seems pretty evident that the refs are failing us on this one.

Dudes funny but the evidence seems pretty clear that the Eagles false start almost every time without a flag. It’s getting kinda weird.

I'm telling everybody that they hired a Scotsman and he taught it to them. Oh, by the way @Pickle Rody, this is why I used the word "Scottish." The Athletic did. You know, that racist and ethno-baiting rag from the New York Times. LOL.

You guys are unreal. The NYT even use the word "Scotsman." Doubly offensive, I say!


"As the only Scot with a rugby background coaching in the NFL, people quickly connected the dots, and calls came in from his friends across the league to find out details. However, the specifics of his input remain an industry secret. . . [t]his came about after receiving a phone call from an Eagles defensive assistant coach, Tyler Scudder, as Gray knew the team’s director of sports performance at the time, Ted Rath, from Rath’s previous job at the Miami Dolphins. Stoutland reserved him a couple of days before arriving to look at the tush push, to advise how he would break it up and improve the play.

'I’ve spent the last 20 years working on how to move bodies: angles, force, height, weight, you name it,' Gray says. 'So on watching it we kind of ripped the whole play to bits and built it back up again, and out of that conversation, I’m sure there were two or three things the group took and added to the play. The play is over three levels, firstly, the offensive line. You’ve got some phenomenal O-line athletes at the Eagles, one of the heaviest in the league, some huge humans. You’ve then got Jalen Hurts, who is pound-for-pound one of the strongest quarterbacks in the league, so the play is completely made for his body type.'

Hurts squatted 600 pounds (272 kilograms) while in college at Alabama.

'Then you’ve got two players in behind him who actually don’t add that much at all in the push. It’s called the push, but if you watch it, there’s actually not a lot of pushing involved in it. It’s thought of as a pushing play, but a lot of the time, those two back pushers never get to Hurts. The job’s done before then. I always class it as organised mass.'
 
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Again, so what? Ooh, a Scotsman developed the play so it must be a "rugby" play. So what?

No one is playing rugby on Sundays in NFL stadiums. No one.
 
Originally, the traditionalist in me said no, it should not be banned. It's a boring, lame play, but it is the defenses job to find a way to beat it.

However, there are some very valid points made in here that has me rethinking that.

1) Safety (however, has anyone been hurt while doing it/trying to stop it?)
2) It does appear that the guard jumps offside every damn time, giving the offense an advantage. Refs need to start calling that.
3) Fair play. If the defense can't jump on a teammates back or off an offensive lineman to block a kick/pass, then the offense shouldn't be allowed to push their teammate either. (But we all know the NFL doesn't care about fairness for the defense)

So unless the NFL can address those issues (I'm sure there are other valid issues/concerns), it should be banned in the name of fairness.
 
Originally, the traditionalist in me said no, it should not be banned. It's a boring, lame play, but it is the defenses job to find a way to beat it.

However, there are some very valid points made in here that has me rethinking that.

1) Safety (however, has anyone been hurt while doing it/trying to stop it?)
2) It does appear that the guard jumps offside every damn time, giving the offense an advantage. Refs need to start calling that.
3) Fair play. If the defense can't jump on a teammates back or off an offensive lineman to block a kick/pass, then the offense shouldn't be allowed to push their teammate either. (But we all know the NFL doesn't care about fairness for the defense)

So unless the NFL can address those issues (I'm sure there are other valid issues/concerns), it should be banned in the name of fairness.

Not sure. I think we should just be consistent and allow other players to assist players everywhere. Blocked kicks are going to be wild. ;)
 
I hope they never change this. The comedy value is too good.

https://x.com/MattFosterTV/status/1988057517503451331?s=20
not many people will understand or care.....but there is a HUGE difference between live speed and slow motion replay....if refs had the slow motion replay vision we get to see sitting on our sofas (or in this clip) .....they might never miss a call....
Every tush push, or most of them? If they are getting a 2 foot head start before the ball is snapped on most tush push plays the Eagles run and the refs aren't calling it, how do you explain that?
 
I hope they never change this. The comedy value is too good.

https://x.com/MattFosterTV/status/1988057517503451331?s=20
not many people will understand or care.....but there is a HUGE difference between live speed and slow motion replay....if refs had the slow motion replay vision we get to see sitting on our sofas (or in this clip) .....they might never miss a call....

For sure. Slow motion would be awesome. I think every person understands that.

But this one isn't that hard.

I said this the other day - I know the answer is that this play is impossible to officiate. I was thinking the other day we might come up with a radical new change for officiating.

What if we put an official right at the line of scrimmage to look at the play from this camera angle in the clip and, I know this sounds crazy, maybe make that official's primary job making sure the guard didn't launch so far ahead of the ball being snapped.

We could even come up with a fancy new name for the position. Maybe, "Line Judge"? Crazy I know... :lmao:

And of course, that's a lame shot at a joke.

I do though hope they never change this. The comedy value is too good.

https://x.com/MattFosterTV/status/1988057517503451331?s=20
 
Originally, the traditionalist in me said no, it should not be banned. It's a boring, lame play, but it is the defenses job to find a way to beat it.

However, there are some very valid points made in here that has me rethinking that.

1) Safety (however, has anyone been hurt while doing it/trying to stop it?)
2) It does appear that the guard jumps offside every damn time, giving the offense an advantage. Refs need to start calling that.
3) Fair play. If the defense can't jump on a teammates back or off an offensive lineman to block a kick/pass, then the offense shouldn't be allowed to push their teammate either. (But we all know the NFL doesn't care about fairness for the defense)

So unless the NFL can address those issues (I'm sure there are other valid issues/concerns), it should be banned in the name of fairness.

Not sure. I think we should just be consistent and allow other players to assist players everywhere. Blocked kicks are going to be wild. ;)
only a matter of time
 
Originally, the traditionalist in me said no, it should not be banned. It's a boring, lame play, but it is the defenses job to find a way to beat it.

However, there are some very valid points made in here that has me rethinking that.

1) Safety (however, has anyone been hurt while doing it/trying to stop it?)
2) It does appear that the guard jumps offside every damn time, giving the offense an advantage. Refs need to start calling that.
3) Fair play. If the defense can't jump on a teammates back or off an offensive lineman to block a kick/pass, then the offense shouldn't be allowed to push their teammate either. (But we all know the NFL doesn't care about fairness for the defense)

So unless the NFL can address those issues (I'm sure there are other valid issues/concerns), it should be banned in the name of fairness.Ra

Not sure. I think we should just be consistent and allow other players to assist players everywhere. Blocked kicks are going to be wild. ;)
only a matter of time

Absolutely.

If I'm the Raiders, I'm signing a bunch of the Cirque de Soleil athletes right now. They are going to be unstoppable.
 
And then of course, the natural defense to the RB Launch will be the defense adding their own Cirque de Soleil athletes and launching them to meet the RB 15 feet in the air.

It's going to be awesome.
Unfortunately, I think about half of the owners and maybe half of the NFL fan base would be okay with this.
 
Originally, the traditionalist in me said no, it should not be banned. It's a boring, lame play, but it is the defenses job to find a way to beat it.

However, there are some very valid points made in here that has me rethinking that.

1) Safety (however, has anyone been hurt while doing it/trying to stop it?)
2) It does appear that the guard jumps offside every damn time, giving the offense an advantage. Refs need to start calling that.
3) Fair play. If the defense can't jump on a teammates back or off an offensive lineman to block a kick/pass, then the offense shouldn't be allowed to push their teammate either. (But we all know the NFL doesn't care about fairness for the defense)

So unless the NFL can address those issues (I'm sure there are other valid issues/concerns), it should be banned in the name of fairness.
See my post at the top of this page. It addresses all of these concerns.
 
I hope they never change this. The comedy value is too good.

https://x.com/MattFosterTV/status/1988057517503451331?s=20
It's the first I watched that play against the Packers. You have to be blind not to see the Eagles got a 2 foot head start before the ball was snapped. How could they miss that? Do they do that on every tush push?
No not even close, although the narrative in here is that they do it every time. It’s nowhere close to often.

Also, right before that play GB ran a qb sneak (not tush push) and jumped offsides as well. No call.
 
I love the play and would adore it if my team ran it.

I think its ugly and not in the spirit of the game.

Both can be true.

I would vote to NOT ban it. Partly because I dont want to have to read about it here for the rest of my life and part because eventually teams will figure out a way to stop it.
I’ll start paying attention to that. Perhaps it happens more than you realize. Whatever, they need to call it when it happens.
 
I love the play and would adore it if my team ran it.

I think its ugly and not in the spirit of the game.

Both can be true.

I would vote to NOT ban it. Partly because I dont want to have to read about it here for the rest of my life and part because eventually teams will figure out a way to stop it.
I’ll start paying attention to that. Perhaps it happens more than you realize. Whatever, they need to call it when it happens.
I think you were meaning to respond to me. I agree, if they’re offsides, call it. It’s not that hard.
 

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