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Posted

Let's just change the name of the game from football to airball. Heck we already apply the foot to the ball less than a quarter of the plays. All the NFL wants to see is the ball in the air.

Posted

Let's just change the name of the game from football to airball. Heck we already apply the foot to the ball less than a quarter of the plays. All the NFL wants to see is the ball in the air.

 

It's called football because the ball is 12 inches long.....

Posted

It's called football because the ball is 12 inches long.....

It's called football because back in the day they called everything you play while running with a ball football to differentiate it from games played on horseback

Posted

 

 

It's called football because the ball is 12 inches long.....

Is that true?

I've never heard that before?

This thread is blowing my mind!

Posted

Is that true?

I've never heard that before?

This thread is blowing my mind!

Not true, it was called football before we had the modern dimensions

 

http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2010/06/the-origin-of-the-word-soccer/

 

Just as intriguing, for those who like to lambaste American Football being called such when the ball interacts primarily with hands, most of the earliest forms of Football were named thus, not because you kicked a ball with your foot, but because they were played on foot. Peasants played most of their sports on foot; aristocrats played most of theirs on horseback. Thus, games played on foot were called “football”, whether they had anything to do with kicking a ball or not. Indeed, many of the earliest forms of football involved carrying balls in an attempt to get across goal lines passed some opposing team or individual players.
Posted

Eventually the lawyers and the risk of injuries will kill the game.

 

Lets just move on to flag football and get it over with now....

Posted

Onside kicks in the NFL are successful 26% of the time. It’s true, but it’s also very misleading. Onside kick success rates are very dependent on whether the receiving team is expecting one. When teams are expecting it, the success rate is about 20%. But when teams aren’t expecting it, the success rate averages 60%.

 

http://www.advancedn...side-kicks.html

 

 

the same folks analyzed 4th & 15.....and claim about a 20% success rate....

 

http://www.advancedn...udy-part-3.html

 

well, that is interesting. Thanks for sharing!! But I still think it should be 4th and longer. Generally (not always), if you get yourself into a 4th and 15 the other defense contributed to that, and therefore is likely to stop you. However, following a scoring play, you scored because the defense did not stop you, so it is more likely that you covert those 4th and 15 plays.

Posted

You can't just give the team the ball on the 20 because it takes away the onside kick or the chance for a team to get the ball back when they are behind.

 

what about a jump ball at the fifty?

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