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Why do teams do it now?Why would fouling help close the gap?
Why do teams do it now?Why would fouling help close the gap?
Why do teams do it now?
Finally, some sense. If you made it 2 shots and possession no one would do it again.I think the real way to fix the “problem” is actually calling intentional fouls when you just grab the dude. Make them make a real attempt at the ball.
I think the real way to fix the “problem” is actually calling intentional fouls when you just grab the dude. Make them make a real attempt at the ball.
If this is a choice between a better finish to the game versus losing the occasional Mountian West barnburner, sign me up for the former.With these rules Nevada never beats new Mexico January 7 2017. Trailed by 25 in the 2nd half and trailed 87-68 with 3:53 to play. New Mexico led 94-91 with 18 seconds to play (game over with Elam ending). Nevada tied the game at 94 and it went to overtime where Nevada won 105-104
Here is what I see in OT. People head to the exits. It can’t be that popular.
Touche' but there is some merit for a finite ending. In the old days I was good for as many baseball extra innings as there could be, but on a weeknight these days very limited and even weekend I don't think I'd last past 11 frames. Playoff game in for the duration, but otherwise no.People leave the Superbowl early. Beating traffic is paramount apparently. People are idiots.

Anyone else take a gut at UConn called "Philosophy of Sports"? The instructor posited that an intentional foul is cheating. I immediately thought that was ridiculous. But my thinking quickly reversed. Intentional fouls are cheating. Intentionally breaking the rules for competitive advantage is cheating, period. That breaking the rules in these situations is expected is a major flaw in the game. It's a flaw that hasn't be able to be fixed to date with the punishment approach. But this flaw is eliminated with the Elam Ending. And by not requiring our student-athletes to cheat, it's the moral choice as well.
I can't think of any other sport where repeated and constant committing fouls/penalty or other rules violation is such an accepted part of the strategy. We've gotten used to it, the semantics of whether its 'cheating' or not aren't important as it absolutely is not in the spirit of the game.It’s not breaking the rules....
I can't think of any other sport where repeated and constant committing fouls/penalty or other rules violation is such an accepted part of the strategy. We've gotten used to it, the semantics of whether its 'cheating' or not aren't important as it absolutely is not in the spirit of the game.
It’s not even gaming the rules. It it was thy would increase the penalties.
How can your reply to me saying it is semantics be "It's not cheating though" ? That is what I said. 'Strategic fouls' in soccer, football or basketball is definitely 'gaming the rules'; I'd define a strategic foul as 'a purposeful rule violation to force or accept the lesser of two bad outcomes' if that's not gaming the rules we are back to arguing over semantics which thus far eludes your grasp. I can't make a point if you are gaming the rules of grammar solely to further your objectives.It’s not cheating though.
FWIW soccer has plenty of strategic fouls.
The CFB penalty for DPI rewards the defense at times.
It’s not even gaming the rules. It it was thy would increase the penalties.
I agree that end-game fouling needs to have more of a consequence.
But the solution needs to involve overtime and clock-management skills. Elam ending takes a lot of that away. Those are integral parts of the game that make it enjoyable to watch for fans like me. This solution feels as gimmicky as advancing the ball to half court (which I hate).
Fouling in the late-game has been incentivized. Start making free throws fellas. Or come up with another solution. 2 free throws and the ball under 2 minutes for each half. Start calling intentional fouls. I don't know.
I've got a lot of questions.The last two minutes of a game is little more than sloth . We all know how it's going to end, but it's painful to watch.
(Yes, in graduate school I was tortured with a video and presentation on sloth reproduction. The only thing that made it bearable was the girl behind me moaning, "faaaaaastuuuuuuur, faaaaastuuuuur ..." during the video)
I agree that end-game fouling needs to have more of a consequence.
But the solution needs to involve overtime and clock-management skills. Elam ending takes a lot of that away. Those are integral parts of the game that make it enjoyable to watch for fans like me. This solution feels as gimmicky as advancing the ball to half court (which I hate).
Fouling in the late-game has been incentivized. Start making free throws fellas. Or come up with another solution. 2 free throws and the ball under 2 minutes for each half. Start calling intentional fouls. I don't know.
I've got a lot of questions.
Was she good looking (not the sloth, the girl behind you)?
If so what was your follow-up line?
I'm thinking either:
1) So you like it faster than sloths do?
2) You think that's slow love making, I will make you beg
come up with another solution. 2 free throws and the ball under 2 minutes for each half. Start calling intentional fouls. I don't know.