too easy......
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too easy......
Its like watching a college offense
The rule is definitely vague, but I think the "prevent the snap" language is in there so that a team cannot get an encroachment or other penalty to give themselves more time to check the replay to see if they want to challenge. This is in terms of challengeable plays. As for automatic reviews (unchallengeable plays), there are still instances where the booth does not have time to initiate, i.e. under 2 minutes when a team is in hurry-up, where an intentional penalty to buy time could be employed. As for scoring and recently-added turnovers there seems to be a natural delay that would allow an automatic review, which makes the "to prevent a snap" language pretty unnecessary and stupid.
The bottomline to me, is that the replay official had already initiated the review, which in itself would hold up the snap, so that after that point any penalty, including pre-snap, would not technically "prevent" any snap. So I guess I am saying "prevent a snap" doesn't necessarily mean simply "pre-snap."
But you are right, the rule is nonsense, and it can be interpreted in a couple different ways, and the refs obviously, after the Thanksgiving Day game, are going to try to avoid such a stupid situation from occrring until next year when I guarantee they clear up the rule.
Not a lot of laundry and the game moves so much faster....
I'm not one to quickly jump on a rookie being a sensation. Live long enough and you see plenty of promising players quietly disappear after their rookie season.
Not saying that's what's going to happen to RG3, but I'll wait until at least years 2 and 3 to see what he becomes. Wait until teams learn how to properly gameplan for him, then see what he has.
Same goes for other rookies having good years, like Andrew Luck and Russell Wilson.
Man i must say this is one of the better officiating games.
Good post. Of the three, I think Andrew Luck is definitely here to stay... in all the history of the league, the only constant formula for winning has been an accurate, strong-armed, intelligent, and versatile passer who can will his team to victory even without a lot of help around him. Andrew Luck at a minimum has shown flashes of being exactly that.
Wilson and RGIII on the other hand get most of their production as a corollary to the run game and defenses around the league have not yet adopted to the college style spread option that makes the Seahawks and Redskins offenses work. RGIII has like 65% of his production off play-action this year, and teams are so scared of the option run and Alfred Morris that Griffin doesn't have to make a lot of reads or throw a lot of passes into tight windows.
The league will adapt to the option next year and take it away, the same as defenses adjusted to the Wildcat and took that away. The Dolphins got so much production out of the Wildcat in 2008 but it was dead the next year and nobody runs more than a handful of Wildcat plays a year.
I still think RGIII could be very good in any system, but he'll need to show me he can read defenses and pass from the pocket before I believe in him fully.
<yawn> I am losing interest in this game.... gah