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The Retard
03-31-2006, 04:48 AM
It's official: New rules to take effect
(http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20060330/SPT02/603300373/1066/rss07)
Owners vote to crack down on low hits to the quarterback, celebrations
BY MARK CURNUTTE | ENQUIRER STAFF WRITER

ORLANDO, Fla. - NFL owners voted Wednesday to adopt rules that protect quarterbacks from low hits, limit excessive end-zone celebrations, protect long-snappers, expand the horse-collar rule and speed up the game.

Owners also voted against proposed rules changes that would have allowed wide receivers to re-set - in an effort to reduce the number of false start penalties - and would have placed an electronic communicator in a defensive player's helmet. The league also tabled a proposal to expand the playoff field from 12 teams.

QUARTERBACK HITS

Though the measure would not have protected Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer from the knee-level hit he took in the playoffs, the league voted 25-7 to prohibit low hits on a passer who has one or both feet on the ground.

Only if a pass rusher is thrown into the quarterback would such a hit not be penalized. Defenders are not prohibited from hitting a quarterback in the knees or lower if the defender cannot avoid such contact.

"I was glad the things that got through did get through," Bengals president Mike Brown said after the vote, which concluded the league's annual meeting. "It's a start on the quarterback thing; I don't think the whole story has been written on that one. We were glad we took a step forward."

CELEBRATIONS

The league voted 29-3 to prohibit excessive or prolonged displays after a touchdown.

A player no longer may use an artificial prop, such as Chad Johnson's use of a pylon to putt the football, or employ the football as a prop. Johnson gave the ball CPR in Jacksonville last season.

Players also may not go to the ground to celebrate, such as the snow angel gesture made by Carolina's Steve Smith last year. Such displays will draw a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty on the ensuing kickoff.

SNAPS

Centers who snap the ball on extra points or field goals no longer will face defenders directly over them. Game officials will move defenders away from the center before the snap in an effort to protect the center from injury, such as his head whipping back from contact. The change passed 32-0 to penalize the defense with a 5-yard illegal formation ruling.

HORSE-COLLAR TACKLES

Otherwise known as the Roy Williams rule - after the Dallas safety that injured then-Eagles receiver Terrell Owens with a horse-collar tackle in 2004 - it was expanded to include the jersey. By a vote of 25-7, the league ruled to also prohibit grabbing the collar of the jersey as well as the underside of the shoulder pads.

REPLAYS

Game officials now may not spend more than 60 seconds "under the hood" watching various angles of challenged calls. The previous limit was 90 seconds, and the effort is to cut the average challenge time down from 3 minutes, 17 seconds.

FALSE STARTS

The flinch rule was a surprising loss. It would have allowed wide receivers to re-set to reduce the record number of false start penalties (852 in 2005),

"The argument would be a rule is a rule, so just stay pat," Brown said. "But we do have the issue of too many penalties and too much time being spent extending the game needlessly. These plays don't impact the game. I hope our (coaches and players) can stay at it and come around.

DEFENSIVE COMMUNICATOR

Technology would have allowed for a specific defensive player to be equipped with an in-helmet electronic communicator - like the ones worn by quarterbacks.

The idea was voted down.

"The question came up what if it malfunctions," said Tennessee coach Jeff Fisher, co-chair of the league's competition committee. "There's more work that needs to be done. It is a competition issue (because some teams take video of opposing defensive coaches sending in signals and try to steal signs.)"

EXPANDED PLAYOFFS

The Kansas City Chiefs' proposal to expand the playoff field was tabled, not so much out of objection but to allow the league to work out potential scheduling issues with television networks.

Jofreidr_1488
04-02-2006, 01:27 PM
CELEBRATIONS

This is bad.

One of the things that sets nigger affletes apart from White Athletes is there exuberent celebrations. In contrast usually a White will just spike the ball or just hand it to the jewish referee. After watching some of this monkeying around (pun intended) it is much easier to believe that different Races do indeed exist.

Keep the Celebrations.

Worse is better for now.

Keystone
04-02-2006, 09:16 PM
This is bad.

One of the things that sets nigger affletes apart from White Athletes is there exuberent celebrations.
That's one of the reasons I stopped watching football, which is a mortal sin here. I'm an outkast from Sept to Feb....:rofl:
In contrast usually a White will just spike the ball or just hand it to the jewish referee. After watching some of this monkeying around (pun intended) it is much easier to believe that different Races do indeed exist.
They also like to stand over someone they just tackled and talk shit down to them....Just great stuff....:D White fans lap it up and build lil shrines to them at home and work.
Keep the Celebrations.
It's part of the circus.

Intrepid
04-03-2006, 12:01 AM
Much like ideological flippancy around... football is a deeply flawed sport. Hence the constant rule changes.

Keystone
04-03-2006, 12:57 AM
Much like ideological flippancy around... football is a deeply flawed sport. Hence the constant rule changes.
I never thought of it that way....

Besides the DH, baseball has changed nary a bit in ages...Being a National League person, I sniff at that rule change.

The Buccos start the season tomorrow tied for first.....:p

Intrepid
04-03-2006, 01:30 AM
I never thought of it that way....

Besides the DH, baseball has changed nary a bit in ages...Being a National League person, I sniff at that rule change.


Yeah, if you think about it, other than the DH and the mound height change in the early '70s - I think it changed then - virtually no changes. A perfect sport. :D

The Buccos start the season tomorrow tied for first.....:p

We just tried to unload a John Thompson for Craig Wilson/Salomon Torres trade on you last week. Alas, the Pirates backed out and Thompson's elbow had "tenderness" two days later. Be grateful you don't have Chris "My-ERA-is-17.05-in-the-playoffs-&-I've-blown-22-out-of-51-save-opportunities" Reitsma as your closer.

Dienekes
04-03-2006, 02:16 AM
Much like ideological flippancy around... football is a deeply flawed sport. Hence the constant rule changes.

I agree baseball is a better game, but most of footballs rule changes have stemmed from the fact that it is such a violent sport. A desire to protect your product, ie. the players, is a far cry from ideological flippancy.


Go Red Sox!

Intrepid
04-03-2006, 07:05 AM
I agree baseball is a better game, but most of footballs rule changes have stemmed from the fact that it is such a violent sport. A desire to protect your product, ie. the players, is a far cry from ideological flippancy.


Go Red Sox!

True. I just think the stability with the general structure of baseball - in the fact that rules have hardly changed since its inception - stand in sharp contrast to football. For that matter, hockey or basketball, as well.

leondegrance
04-04-2006, 02:28 AM
I'm sick of all that showboating. Black players with class (such as retired Darryl Green and Art Monk) are a thing of the past

Trojan
04-07-2006, 05:22 PM
I never thought of it that way....

Besides the DH, baseball has changed nary a bit in ages...Being a National League person, I sniff at that rule change.

The Buccos start the season tomorrow tied for first.....:p

You watch Baseball but not Football? Kinda backwards for Pittsburgh.

Niko Bellic
04-07-2006, 07:35 PM
That's one of the reasons I stopped watching football, which is a mortal sin here. I'm an outkast from Sept to Feb....:rofl:


It's just as bad with OSU Buckeye football in Columbus. I don't have anything against the team, but Buckeye fans are obnoxious.

Niko Bellic
04-07-2006, 07:39 PM
Much like ideological flippancy around... football is a deeply flawed sport. Hence the constant rule changes.

Football is the perfect sport. It has the perfect mix of violence, chaos, and strategy.

Baseball: all strategy, and it's more exciting to watch paint dry than a baseball game.

Basketball and Hockey: all chaos, I can't even follow those sports. all I see are five guys going around in circles and all of them are trying to score.

Intrepid
04-08-2006, 03:33 AM
Football is the perfect sport. It has the perfect mix of violence, chaos, and strategy.

Baseball: all strategy, and it's more exciting to watch paint dry than a baseball game.



The NFL - more aptly named the Negro Football League, as it is 70%+ - is a sport dominated by negroes and their various tribal victory spasms, requiring an IQ of 65 to appreciate it. The only so-called sport that has 400 behemoths, who can barely tie their shoes.

On the other hand, MLB has been a time treasured part of American lore for nearly 200 years. A game so steeped in Americana, that it rightfully stands as our national pastime. A sport entirely built on strategy and the ultimate battle of wits: batter vs. pitcher.

The Retard
04-08-2006, 04:44 AM
MLB is only around 60% white

President Camacho
04-08-2006, 05:22 AM
Though the measure would not have protected Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer from the knee-level hit he took in the playoffs, the league voted 25-7 to prohibit low hits on a passer who has one or both feet on the ground.LAME......

Intrepid
04-08-2006, 05:56 AM
MLB is only around 60% white

True. But the negro % of of the league is barely hovering at 9%, and still in decline. Quite a glaring contrast to the 70-75% of the NFL. By the very nature of the sport, baseball's negroes don't go into nog-dance-mode after each hit, out, homerun... either.

Keystone
04-08-2006, 04:24 PM
You watch Baseball but not Football? Kinda backwards for Pittsburgh.
Ya, it is. I fell away from watching football after the '70s for various reasons, and never really got interested again. Also, the overblown hype and endless chatter that surrounds a Steeler's season doesn't help. I tell people to STFU sometimes...:p

I've always preferred baseball.

Keystone
04-08-2006, 04:42 PM
Football is the perfect sport. It has the perfect mix of violence, chaos, and strategy.
I used to think so. There are some exciting plays, but mostly it's everyone falling down every few minutes. meh.
Baseball: all strategy, and it's more exciting to watch paint dry than a baseball game.
I guess it's like that for some people. It's not all strategy, though. There are some great individual plays and some great individual errors, too. I like the flow of the game better than football.
Basketball and Hockey: all chaos, I can't even follow those sports. all I see are five guys going around in circles and all of them are trying to score.
I'd watch basketball again if they raised the hoop and got rid of all the thugs.