NFL’s response to controversial Lions-Falcons ending doesn’t add up

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<section class="subsection article__section__step article_module_section">NFL and NCAA football officials use the “10-second runoff rule” to punish teams for committing certain penalties that stop the clock in the final minute of either half -- or in the overtime period, in the case of NFL games. If the game clock has less than 10 seconds left when the referee orders the runoff, the half or game can end on this ruling.

</section><section class="subsection article__section__step article_module_section"> Rationale for the Rule

Before this rule was instituted, an offensive team with no remaining timeouts could deliberately commit a violation -- such as a false start, an illegal forward pass, a backward pass out of bounds or a ball spiked or thrown from the field of play after a play ended -- to stop the clock. The penalty resulted in lost yardage, but the clock stopped, and the punished team then ran a play. This tactic allowed teams to stop the clock in the final 10 seconds without using a timeout and then run one last play.

Defensive Side of the Rule

Before rule changes, defensive teams with no remaining timeouts could deliberately commit an encroachment penalty to stop the clock. The punished team lost penalty yardage but got another opportunity to regain the ball. NFL rules do not call for a 10-second clock runoff in this scenario; rather, the play clock is reset to 40 seconds, and play may resume on the official’s ready signal. The offense may allow the clock to run for 40 seconds without running another play, if it chooses. This effectively negates the game-stopping tactic.

<section class="subsection article__section__step article_module_section"> Injuries and 10-Second Runoffs

To prevent teams from faking injuries to stop the clock, the NFL opted to charge teams a timeout for injuries that halt play during the final two minutes of a half. If a team has used all of its timeouts, then a 10-second runoff occurs on the first injury. For each additional injury, a 10-second runoff and a 5-yard penalty are assessed.

</section><section class="subsection article__section__step article_module_section"> Replay Reviews and 10-Second Runoffs

If a video replay review is ordered in the final minute of either half while the clock is running, the officials will order 10 seconds run off the clock. Either team can prevent the runoff by using a timeout. This rule prevents a team that is out of timeouts from gaining any benefit from a clock stoppage caused by replay review.


</section><section class="subsection article__section__step article_module_section"> NCAA Follows Suit

The University of North Carolina rallied to beat the University of Tennessee, 30 to 27, in the 2010 Music City Bowl -- after spiking the ball to stop the clock, while still substituting players in and out of the game. The UNC Tar Heels were penalized, but they kicked a field goal to tie the game and then prevailed in overtime. As a result, the NCAA Rules Committee instituted a 10-second runoff rule that mimics the NFL rule. Had the Music City Bowl been played under the new rule, it would have ended with the clock runoff.

</section>


</section>

I still don't agree with that rule because EVERY TD is reviewed
the call on the field was a TD by the Refs, which means if they didn't CALL it a TD, the lions would have had more time on the clock
 

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since they have video review they should put all the players back where they were and start the clock at 0:11 to finish the game

why punish a team cause the refs made another mistake
 

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not sure how to insert an image or how to resize...lol


but, again, my happy tears turned sad quickly

file:///Users/ZSultanali/Downloads/IMG_6900.PNG
 
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not sure how to insert an image or how to resize...lol


but, again, my happy tears turned sad quickly

file:///Users/ZSultanali/Downloads/IMG_6900.PNG

Yeah that won't work because that's on your computer. You need to upload it to something like photobucket

if it's a picture from a website, just link it and I'll post it
 

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when i posted this her right after it happened,almost no one commented or cared,now all of a sudden it matters?

Probably people hadn't seen the game (it's the Lions) or they were still watching football, its Sunday bro. Unless it's an in-game thread, most football talk on here happens not on game day.
 

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Gaz

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The very nature of the premise of this forum, gambling, is why they won't do anything. They can't admit their mistake, have the Lions file a protest and then overturn either the call or the attempt of another play. Can you imagine the impact on Vegas? And in my personal opinion, i agree that the Lions got hosed.
 
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That's a damned TD. Ball on the goaline before the knee is down. Detroit got double hosed. Make it triple hosed. The original call was TD. There is no way that there is irrefutable evidence that his knee was down before the ball crossed the plane. No way. ROBBED.
 

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