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Rule Changes For 2018


BigBlue

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46 minutes ago, JCon said:

I was extremely impressed with the refing in the NCAA

one of my favourite reffing outcomes is from US college football

Quote

 

LAS VEGAS -- Sports bettors in Nevada are complaining to state gambling regulators over a scoring change in last weekend's USC-Utah football game that didn't affect the outcome, but swung the betting result in many sports books from the Utes to the Trojans.

Enforcement chief Jerry Markling of the Nevada Gaming Control Board told The Associated Press on Monday that regulators have been taking calls from gamblers and casinos and are trying to resolve disputes after Pac-12 officials changed the score of Saturday night's game two hours after it ended.

Normally, the change wouldn't have meant much. But in the betting world, it caused major concern as USC bettors who had scrapped their tickets or thought they were losers found themselves poring over the technicalities of house rules, trying to see how their casino was supposed to handle the situation

 

:D

 

Edited by Mark F
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19 hours ago, 17to85 said:

but PI is a subjective call, which is why reviewing it is crazy to me. By the letter of the law you can probably find PI on any play, which is why so many coaches went on fishing trips so much and it was so successful. It was a gross over reaction to one missed call in the playoffs a few years ago and it's made the game worse. Just let the refs call PI on the field and screw it up or not, feels better when it's screwed up in real time than when it's still screwed up after review. 

PI is not as 'subjective' as it used to be.  Especially not after the review.  In my opinion, the review process has made PI about 90-95% accurate especially since there is a single review official that knows exactly what to look for now.  

You won't see PI challenges taken out of the game any time soon as long they are accurately affecting the outcome of the game, which I feel they mostly are.

 

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13 minutes ago, TrueBlue said:

PI is not as 'subjective' as it used to be.  Especially not after the review.  In my opinion, the review process has made PI about 90-95% accurate especially since there is a single review official that knows exactly what to look for now.  

You won't see PI challenges taken out of the game any time soon as long they are accurately affecting the outcome of the game, which I feel they mostly are.

What game were you watching all season?  Even after review it was a crapshoot whether a call would be PI or not.  It was totally inconsistent.

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4 minutes ago, Atomic said:

What game were you watching all season?  Even after review it was a crapshoot whether a call would be PI or not.  It was totally inconsistent.

Call it a crapshoot or inconsistent or whatever you want, but what you're looking for and what the replay official is specifically looking for could be much different.   What makes you determine whether it's PI or not?  It's a fine line.  (This is a whole other problem.)

Are there mistakes either way?  Of course there are, but the system has made it better than what it used to be. 

 

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13 minutes ago, TrueBlue said:

Call it a crapshoot or inconsistent or whatever you want, but what you're looking for and what the replay official is specifically looking for could be much different.   What makes you determine whether it's PI or not?  It's a fine line.  (This is a whole other problem.)

Are there mistakes either way?  Of course there are, but the system has made it better than what it used to be. 

No it's actually quite simple.  If I see a play called PI in one game, and then an almost identical play not called PI in the next game, that is a problem.  I don't care what the definition of PI is as long as it is applied consistently.  This is the problem.

There is no way to spin this.  I watch both leagues obsessively.  I love the CFL.  I'm not trying to tear it down here.  CFL officiating is worse.  Objectively.  And it needs to get better... replay included.

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1 hour ago, TrueBlue said:

PI is not as 'subjective' as it used to be.  Especially not after the review.  In my opinion, the review process has made PI about 90-95% accurate especially since there is a single review official that knows exactly what to look for now.  

You won't see PI challenges taken out of the game any time soon as long they are accurately affecting the outcome of the game, which I feel they mostly are.

 

Hmm, so why don't they put that guy in the booth?

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1 hour ago, Atomic said:

No it's actually quite simple.  If I see a play called PI in one game, and then an almost identical play not called PI in the next game, that is a problem.  I don't care what the definition of PI is as long as it is applied consistently.  This is the problem.

There is no way to spin this.  I watch both leagues obsessively.  I love the CFL.  I'm not trying to tear it down here.  CFL officiating is worse.  Objectively.  And it needs to get better... replay included.

On field officials call it wrong all the time, that's not what I am referring to. 

Highly unlikely you're seeing "an almost identical play" being challenged one game to the next.  If you are, please enlighten me with an example.   

Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that on-field CFL officiating is consistent and without it's faults.   Far from it!

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3 hours ago, TrueBlue said:

PI is not as 'subjective' as it used to be.  Especially not after the review.  In my opinion, the review process has made PI about 90-95% accurate especially since there is a single review official that knows exactly what to look for now.  

You won't see PI challenges taken out of the game any time soon as long they are accurately affecting the outcome of the game, which I feel they mostly are.

 

OK so the replay officials get it right, but you are still only giving coaches the single challenge for it but it's something that the refs can miss in real time way more often than that, in addition to all the other stuff that might need challenged. Honestly I've never been a fan of the review process. There's always going to be human error in reffing I'd just let them ref, or you just take them completely out of the equation and review everything all the time. 

I stand by the PI being a gross over reaction to a badly blown call in a playoff game which has made things worse in the long run. 

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  • 3 weeks later...

So the rules committee meets in March

What is your best recommendation for improving our game this season ..... personally I am going with contacting a receiver away from the play ... mot as a rule and how the reffs call it but as a challengeable play ... if the reffs miss it , too bad

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15 hours ago, Eternal optimist said:

I wouldn't change a thing. The review system is imperfect, so what? Even if somehow referees were hypothetically able to call a perfect game 100% of the time, you'd still have fans griping about bad calls.. unfortunately it is just in the very nature to be inherently biased as fans.

 

 

I would like to see one year where there were not a bunch of changes.

Maybe see if officiating gets better if they're not spending time learning new rules?

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22 minutes ago, BigBlue said:

NFL makes changes every year and it does make the game better & safer .... I want to see more refinement

Yeah, not too many big name NFL players got hurt this season, eh.

https://www.cbssports.com/nfl/news/nfl-2017-all-injured-team-is-loaded-with-pro-bowl-players-at-halfway-point-of-season/

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9 hours ago, BigBlue said:

NFL makes changes every year and it does make the game better & safer .... I want to see more refinement

What? In the past few years, the NFL has put in Thursday night football which has diluted their product, and added to player injuries. On top of that, their current concussion "protocol" is laughable... look at how the Texans handled Tom Savage, he was back on the field for the next series after he took that hit.

http://www.nfl.com/news/story/0ap3000000899837/article/texans-wont-be-disciplined-for-tom-savage-concussion

In neither of these situations is the NFL looking out for their players. Add on top of that, their league is losing viewership in droves (http://www.latimes.com/business/hollywood/la-fi-ct-nfl-ratings-20180104-story.html), remind me again why they should be our role model?

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I would leave the challenge rules as they are but allow the eye in the sky to correct egregious errors without a challenge being required. If we could take better advantage of the eye in the sky to correct the incorrect calls without requiring review then I believe we would see better officiating over all. I would expect the eye in the sky to call the play at the same gamespeed as the ground officials meaning they are only going to call those plainly obvious calls.

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  • 2 weeks later...
On ‎1‎/‎10‎/‎2018 at 8:41 AM, JCon said:

I can't agree enough with this statement. The refs in the CFL are horrible and very inconsistent in what and when they call things.

I mostly watched high-profile college games this year, so I probably saw the best crews, but I was extremely impressed with the refing in the NCAA.

I watch a lot of NCAA football and they make their share of mistakes.  Overall though, they have a far easier job than either pro league because the players are so much slower and have poorer technique. 

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The rule change the CFL should make is that if a player's helmet comes off during the course of legal contact (i.e. another player does not rip it off), that player is ejected from that game and immediately suspended from the next.

The biggest threat to football at all levels is CTE.

The best protection from concussions is the helmet - when it is worn correctly.  Most players are wearing helmets so they can take them off easily and you see helmets flying off players in every game.  The only way to fix it is to penalize the player and the team.

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5 hours ago, MC said:

The rule change the CFL should make is that if a player's helmet comes off during the course of legal contact (i.e. another player does not rip it off), that player is ejected from that game and immediately suspended from the next.

The biggest threat to football at all levels is CTE.

The best protection from concussions is the helmet - when it is worn correctly.  Most players are wearing helmets so they can take them off easily and you see helmets flying off players in every game.  The only way to fix it is to penalize the player and the team.

dewalt-staple-guns-dwhttr130lh-64_1000.j

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  • 2 weeks later...

At league meetings next week I expect the rules committee will focus on "challenges"  and salary cap violations

I wonder what Ambrosie has up his sleeve .... he seems very innovative and proactive ... I bet he has been sitting on several ideas for years

Edited by BigBlue
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  • 2 months later...

Pulled from the Official CFL website today:

The so-called “force out rule” is eliminated: a receiver catching a ball has to place at least one foot inbounds regardless of whether he was contacted in mid-air. 

This will change how D play the perimeter (a bit). Advantage D.

What do Offense fans think of eliminating this force out rule?

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9 minutes ago, HardCoreBlue said:

Pulled from the Official CFL website today:

The so-called “force out rule” is eliminated: a receiver catching a ball has to place at least one foot inbounds regardless of whether he was contacted in mid-air. 

This will change how D play the perimeter (a bit). Advantage D.

What do Offense fans think of eliminating this force out rule?

I think it discourages throws to the sidelines. If I'm a DB, I don't risk an interference call, I just come in late and push the receiver out before he lands. 

 

I don't care for this change. 

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The NFL got rid of the forceout rule a decade ago and they're better off without it IMO.  I've never been a fan of the rule.  You either land in bounds or you don't.  Who's to say that someone would have landed in bounds if they weren't contacted?  It's a judgment call and the less of those the better.

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1 hour ago, Atomic said:

The NFL got rid of the forceout rule a decade ago and they're better off without it IMO.  I've never been a fan of the rule.  You either land in bounds or you don't.  Who's to say that someone would have landed in bounds if they weren't contacted?  It's a judgment call and the less of those the better.

Agreed, take the subjective calls out as much as possible.

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QUOTE:

Pulled from the Official CFL website today:

The so-called “force out rule” is eliminated: a receiver catching a ball has to place at least one foot inbounds regardless of whether he was contacted in mid-air. 

This will change how D play the perimeter (a bit). Advantage D.

What do Offense fans think of eliminating this force out rule?

I do not support this rule change at all. It seems to me they barely call the rule properly now. 

To me, if the QB and the receiver make the proper reads and if the receiver makes a play for the ball, and catches it inbounds, then he should not be subject to a hit that will make the call ‘no catch’. 

The judgment calls will always be in sports. It’s part of the game. Good or bad. That ruling definitely helps the D. And besides, who’s to say it will eliminate subjectivity at all, as in: Did the receiver even have a play for the ball before he was hit out of bounds? Was it an early hit? Or necessary? etc.

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