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Post by blackmagic7 on Apr 6, 2024 23:20:29 GMT -6
There certainly will be miss calls, but also, a hip drop tackle is a lot rarer than advertised. Its apparently something players/coaches have seen and identified behind the scenes over recent years. Guys simply aren't taught to tackle that way, or at least they weren't as recent as a decade ago.
(lol, I saw a video. I'm Internet Expert Certified now.)
I notice watching tape that it's not a tackling technique many guys use and it's situational when certain guys do it. I think what they'll settle on is calling it when guys are "lassoed" by it and fucking it up occasionally in open space where diving tacklers end up holding on while falling down.
To be an optimist, maybe this results in better tackling fundamentals and physicality being brought back into the game via coaching/practice.
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taz24
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Posts: 2,697
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Post by taz24 on Apr 7, 2024 9:32:18 GMT -6
stupid way to tackle, just terrible form. but not sure the NFL will be able to identify it and call it with any consistency.
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Post by 1angryviking on Apr 7, 2024 10:37:22 GMT -6
stupid way to tackle, just terrible form. but not sure the NFL will be able to identify it and call it with any consistency. That is fair; but, there's a lot going on in any given play and defenders aren't always going to be in a position to make a textbook form tackle.
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Post by redbird87 on Apr 7, 2024 13:07:03 GMT -6
Itβs just one more way for the NFL to alter outcomes. If the NFL was so concerned about players health theyβd be playing with the helmet pads teams use in pre season.
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Post by burntpackerdbs84 on Apr 7, 2024 13:08:45 GMT -6
Itβs just one more way for the NFL to alter outcomes. If the NFL was so concerned about players health theyβd be playing with the helmet pads teams use in pre season. Yup agreed, it isn't fun to watch anymore, and it is gonna get worse and worse.
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