Rex wrote: Sun Dec 12, 2021 10:29 pm
This is one of the most entertaining football games I’ve ever seen. Where did this come from?
What happened after this post?
Much like our dreams of a new world order in 1988-1990 turned into three decades of paranoia, political dysfunction and hatefulness, the game really petered out.
Rex wrote: Sun Dec 12, 2021 10:29 pm
This is one of the most entertaining football games I’ve ever seen. Where did this come from?
What happened after this post?
Much like our dreams of a new world order in 1988-1990 turned into three decades of paranoia, political dysfunction and hatefulness, the game really petered out.
Interesting analogy. I thought the Packers just remembered they were playing the Bears.
An honest to God cult of personality - formed around a failed steak salesman.
-Pruitt
I admit this was inspired by a lost bet but this rule has been bugging me for a while...
At the end of the first half of the Giants/Chargers game with the score 14-7 (I had under 21.5 and as it turned out would have lost anyway), the Giants stopped the Chargers 4th and 1 on the NYG 5. But wait there's a flag. False start. LA backs up 5 and kicks the FG. I know the official explanation is "no play" but the play should be blown dead if everything that happens after the snap is going to be null and void. We know the League doesn't really care about player safety but I'm surprised the NFLPA doesn't object to these "no plays" being run. I also feel the same way about the defense jumping offside. The pretense that the offense should get to choose which result they want after the result of a "no play" is patently unfair. If there is a pre-snap penalty, it should be blown dead every single time.
"Pain or damage don't end the world. Or despair or fucking beatings. The world ends when you're dead. Until then, you got more punishment in store. Stand it like a man... and give some back." -Al Swearengen
Might incentivize more offsides and big hits on the QB if you know nothing all that bad is going to happen but I understand your argument and it does have some logic to it.
Pack a vest for your james in the city of intercourse
The Sybian wrote: Mon Dec 13, 2021 4:13 pm
Don't they usually blow the whistle for a false start, or is that just if there is contact between linemen before the snap?
False starts always get a whistle, offsides only if contact or a clear path to the QB, I believe.
One milkshake to bring all the boys to the yard and in the darkness bind them.
I wonder what percentage of fantasy leagues are in the final week of the regular season and were just thrown into mini-chaos by Higbee's late Covid scratch.
A_B wrote: Mon Mar 31, 2025 2:54 pmand henceforth I imagine I’ll be Old …we…t spot AB.
mister d wrote: Mon Dec 13, 2021 4:48 pm
I wonder what percentage of fantasy leagues are in the final week of the regular season and were just thrown into mini-chaos by Higbee's late Covid scratch.
I really need Stafford's name to pop-up. Fuck the NFL with their dumb byes.
In the league I commish, I needed a win and another guy to lose to get in and he has Higbee. He's also down 67. My team got a grand total of 1.80 points out of my QB and WR1. I'm up by 46.
mister d wrote: Mon Dec 13, 2021 4:48 pm
I wonder what percentage of fantasy leagues are in the final week of the regular season and were just thrown into mini-chaos by Higbee's late Covid scratch.
I really need Stafford's name to pop-up. Fuck the NFL with their dumb byes.
In the league I commish, I needed a win and another guy to lose to get in and he has Higbee. He's also down 67. My team got a grand total of 1.80 points out of my QB and WR1. I'm up by 46.
And Higbee was totally going to get 68 points tonight.
An honest to God cult of personality - formed around a failed steak salesman.
-Pruitt
When an NFL team signs a player from another team's practice squad (or once he has been released and has passed through waivers), that they are playing the following week. How likely is it that the team retaining that player has done so to learn about his previous team's playbook, terminology?
For example the Titans play the Steelers this weekend and have just signed John Simon. who has been on and off the Titans roster for most of the season and Training camp?
I have noticed this a few times, especially within the ongoing Covid practice team protocols and wondered if this is more to do with coaching, than actually playing?
mister d wrote: Mon Dec 13, 2021 4:48 pm
I wonder what percentage of fantasy leagues are in the final week of the regular season and were just thrown into mini-chaos by Higbee's late Covid scratch.
I won a game and made the postseason at 6-8 after winning a game by 2.5 points when my opponent was stuck with a zero from Higbee. He also had Keenan Allen on the COVID list and Jalen Guyton (the Chargers' #3 WR), who I picked up after seeing Allen wouldn't play, scored 15.5 points for me.
Giff also made the playoffs at 6-8, so it is possible one/both of us will be the first team(s) to finish 6-9, which would be nice.
“The running, the jumping... a celebration of life.”
Tom 1860 wrote: Tue Dec 14, 2021 6:59 am
Could someone help with this question please...
When an NFL team signs a player from another team's practice squad (or once he has been released and has passed through waivers), that they are playing the following week. How likely is it that the team retaining that player has done so to learn about his previous team's playbook, terminology?
For example the Titans play the Steelers this weekend and have just signed John Simon. who has been on and off the Titans roster for most of the season and Training camp?
I would say Simon's knowledge is definitely part of the reason he was signed, certainly a factor that would throw a 50-50 situation between him and another player toward him.
“The running, the jumping... a celebration of life.”
mister d wrote: Mon Dec 13, 2021 4:48 pm
I wonder what percentage of fantasy leagues are in the final week of the regular season and were just thrown into mini-chaos by Higbee's late Covid scratch.
I won a game and made the postseason at 6-8 after winning a game by 2.5 points when my opponent was stuck with a zero from Higbee. He also had Keenan Allen on the COVID list and Jalen Guyton (the Chargers' #3 WR), who I picked up after seeing Allen wouldn't play, scored 15.5 points for me.
Giff also made the playoffs at 6-8, so it is possible one/both of us will be the first team(s) to finish 6-9, which would be nice.
That must be a bullshit league. In happy news, I got my revenge from last year when a hapless long eliminated Sabo beat me on the last day of the season to knock me out of the playoffs. I got to return the favor this year, also finishing 6-8 and losing the tiebreaker to Giff.
An honest to God cult of personality - formed around a failed steak salesman.
-Pruitt
I'm sure I'll get blown out in both of my games, but that's probably the luckiest I've been to get in. Turns out I needed two losses in the league I commish. Three-way tie turned into a points tiebreaker whereas a two-way tie is head-to-head. I'd have been out had it been the latter.
Tom 1860 wrote: Tue Dec 14, 2021 6:59 am
Could someone help with this question please...
When an NFL team signs a player from another team's practice squad (or once he has been released and has passed through waivers), that they are playing the following week. How likely is it that the team retaining that player has done so to learn about his previous team's playbook, terminology?
For example the Titans play the Steelers this weekend and have just signed John Simon. who has been on and off the Titans roster for most of the season and Training camp?
I would say Simon's knowledge is definitely part of the reason he was signed, certainly a factor that would throw a 50-50 situation between him and another player toward him.
But the league has some rules to try and prevent it from happening for that reason. The rules below are a summary but the 3 week item and lead time are factors. Also the TV coverage and sideline mics are so good these days, I am guessing language is hard to keep a secret (I sat next to a coach at lower level college game. He had one of his staff just working language and that was from the stands).
Practice squad players are free to sign with other NFL teams (with the exception of the four protected players described above), but they have to be signed to the 53-man active roster of the acquiring team. A practice squad player cannot be signed to another practice squad unless he is first released.
A practice squad player can not sign with his team’s upcoming opponent, unless he does so six days before the upcoming game or 10 days if his team is currently on a bye week.
If a practice squad player is signed to the active roster, he will receive a minimum of three weekly paychecks, even if he is released before spending three weeks with the new team.
In order to be signed to a practice squad after being released, a player must first clear waivers, and is subject to waiver claims by other teams