• Hi Guest, want to participate in the discussions, keep track of read/unread posts access private forums and more? Create your free account and increase the benefits of your eGriz.com experience today!

To Nick and Jack

This is all just interpretation, and what it says is that if there is excessive force that it can be flagged, regardless of if the play included a hip drop or not. so the hip drop is included in virtually every other type of play that happens on the field.
No it doesn't happen every play. Not at all.
 
Saw this photo from last year's game. If 42 goes dead weight (which it looks like is the case), is that a hip drop? I see those all the time in games. In fact, I think that's how George Kittle injured his ankle last night. It sucks, and I don't think it's ever intentionally dirty, but sometimes that's the only way to tackle a guy.
90
 
Saw this photo from last year's game. If 42 goes dead weight (which it looks like is the case), is that a hip drop? I see those all the time in games. In fact, I think that's how George Kittle injured his ankle last night. It sucks, and I don't think it's ever intentionally dirty, but sometimes that's the only way to tackle a guy.
90
Not even close to the same thing lol
 
Someone remind me, and i could be remembering a different program, but is Ferris state the program that has a reputation for bringing in kind of questionable transfers? Like players from higher levels that were kicked off teams at higher levels of college football? or suspended? Again I could be mixing them up with someone else.
No
 
You don’t know enough educate me on anything. And you never even played the game. Try educating yourself. Hip drop is a dirty play and dangerous and illegal. “though the NCAA initially tabled a ban but adopted similar principles in 2024 to protect players by penalizing the specific act of
swiveling hips to trap a runner's leg below the knee.“ learn the rules of forget. You just got caught being wrong again. You didn’t see all the views of the targeting that others have.
You must think we are idiots. I Googled your quote and the only thing that came up was sports betting sites. I could find nothing that supports your quote. Please cite a source. Until then, it's pure bullshit.

Speaking of targeting, here's a great source to reference: NCAA Football Rules Online You might want to read this sometime and be educated on the rules of the game. Being a knowledgeable of football starts with knowing the rules and you prove time and time again that you don't know them.
 
Should be a 25 yard penalty with no ejection. If a player does it a second time then he should get ejected. I agree there wasn’t much Harper could do to avoid it but by the rule it’s textbook targeting. The punishment for it should just change.
I think the QB should be penalized for targeting.
 
This is all just interpretation, and what it says is that if there is excessive force that it can be flagged, regardless of if the play included a hip drop or not. so the hip drop is included in virtually every other type of play that happens on the field.
Yes, this is part of the rule. Read up on the rule. Hop drop is a dangerous and dirty play. It can and should be called by officials as a penalty when it has occurred. Why is it so hard for you to understand clear English. You aren't going to beat me on this because you are wrong, as you often are.
 
I just did. Jack why don’t you find just one of your “friends” on this site who believes that you NEVER have lied. I’ll wait.
Why don't you just point out a lie, any lie. You can't. I assume that most everyone not speaking up knows that I don't lie. You are an odd duck. Don't understand the game. Provided nothing of value to the board. Act like you just want someone to talk to. You must be lonely.
 
If I want to know about football back when players were taking cigarette breaks during halftime I would talk to hoops. If I want to know about the game in the most recent 50 years, he is clueless.
Did football players ever take cigarette breaks? I've never seen or heard of anyone ever doing that. You will never know anything about football. You are clueless and too dumb.
 
It is not a penalty in college football.

Top blocking TE is Ryan Schlepp. He barely played as he's still recovering from an injury. Lencioni is actually TE3 for MSU.

And no, if Dowler went out the outcome of the game wouldn't have changed. MSU still wins.
Sorry, but a hip drop is a penalty under Unnecessary Roughness in NCAA football. Read up on it. You are truly clueless about football.
 
Did football players ever take cigarette breaks? I've never seen or heard of anyone ever doing that. You will never know anything about football. You are clueless and too dumb.
Football players taking cigarette breaks was pretty common in the 60s and 70s. Len Dawson was photographed smoking at halftime in the first Super Bowl. It still happened but was less common in the 80s and 90s. The most recent smoking player I know of stopped playing around 2000. Chewing tobacco was and still is a lot more common than cigarettes even though its use being shown on tv is banned by the NFL so players have to hide it. Nicotine pouches like Zyn are now popular with football players because they are more discreet.
 
@mthoopsfan did a majority of your teammates use chewing tobacco at Dartmouth? In 1985 around 85% of players in the NFL regularly used chewing tobacco. I am guessing that chewing tobacco and cigarette use was a lot lower at Dartmouth than college football teams as a whole in that time period.
 
Saw this photo from last year's game. If 42 goes dead weight (which it looks like is the case), is that a hip drop? I see those all the time in games. In fact, I think that's how George Kittle injured his ankle last night. It sucks, and I don't think it's ever intentionally dirty, but sometimes that's the only way to tackle a guy.
90
yes
 
Back
Top