mikeisright2
Mike_is_right
mikeisright2

But it has to be 100% inside the upright to be good By your own statement, if “more of the ball was good” is a missed FG. Its need to be 100% “good” to count.

Same here.

And which of these airframes flew again without any inspection or repairs?

I know. I remember back in my day, the Klan had completely different procedures if you were Catholic, Jewish or black. I mean you used different robes and the ropes for lynching were completely different and everything.

Considering you have 1 star and the other comment has 22 and counting, I guess we do want “MOAR” replay.

No... Read that again. This was her half first cousin by blood as they share 1 grandparent (either her dad’s mom or dad)

Statute of Limitations are 3 beautiful words....

I didn’t say you had to be prosecuted for the felony....

Please. If you didn’t commit a felony, you shouldn’t even post it here.

No its not. The rules are quite precise on where to spot it, much like they are precise if its a catch, a fumble, a forward pass, or a touchdown. How a human determines these precise factors is what you are talking about, but they aren’t judgement calls.

Read what I said. They get 1 full “strategy” timeout, and 2 “stop the clock 30 second catch our breath time outs” which is exactly what you want but don’t realize that is what happens.

Here’s why. Do you know what % of plays in the last 2 minutes (excluding kneel downs) have a penalty? About 100%. I played O-Line at a DIII school. You know how often I held? Every play. Now I only got called for about 2 per year, but every play I grabbed a fist of jersey. Now I knew when to let go so not to get

Actually, you can only challenge the spot of a ball if its a first down or not. Otherwise you can’t challenge it. So they are not challenging the spot, they are really challenging a team being awarded 4 more downs or not.

Uh, you do realize that 2 timeouts by each team are 30 second timeouts, right? Only one is longer than that. Also, because timeouts are used to discuss things. If you call timeout to decide whether or not to go for it, you should probably allow enough time for your QB to jog over so you can talk about it.

No. The problem is that it has to go both ways. They have to review for penalties called and not called. So every single play that is within 1 score will always go to review. They will check to see that each player lined up. That a single defensive back didn’t make any contact beyond 5 yards, that a single offensive

No. Think about it. If you get it to the 10 you have just caught the ball with no momentum and you back to the goal line. You have 3-4 teammates in the area with you, but probably 2-3 of them also went for the ball so you have no blockers, and you are all bunched up so you can’t lateral it to anyone to create space.

You answered the question yourself. Teams always go for Hail Mary’s if they are in range, but the combination of the QB having enough arm to get it there with enough loft, and your O-Line can block for 4-5 seconds means that anything beyond midfield is very, very iffy or most QBs. Rodgers isn’t most QBs. How many

He does say that in the article. But you are missing one key point that Jim Caldwell also missed. Teams always opt for the hail mary if they are close enough. The issue is that 61 yards away is only close enough for 1 maybe 2 QBs at best. The Packers are lucky that Rodgers is one of those.

But he never hid that. Think about what Johnny did...

No. Its only applicable to the forces of the governments who signed the convention. So it A) doesn’t apply to rebels, nor B) to countries that didn’t sign it.