bobcatfan123
Well-known member
The "fan" in your name makes sense. The players are not coached to strike the knees except maybe at Sacramento State. They are taught to hit below the center of gravity so the upper body weight pulls the player down. Just because there is not a specific rule banning strikes to the side of the knee doesn't make it okay. I'd be happy to demonstrate the difference to you some time.
The "fan" in your name makes sense. The players are not coached to strike the knees except maybe at Sacramento State. They are taught to hit below the center of gravity so the upper body weight pulls the player down. Just because there is not a specific rule banning strikes to the side of the knee doesn't make it okay. I'd be happy to demonstrate the difference to you some time.
I don’t think we are disagreeing as much as you imply, but that’s kinda the point.
Nobody is coaching a DB to “strike knees.” They’re coached to hit low, wrap, and get a much bigger ball carrier on the ground, especially right after the catch. At game speed, angle and timing matter — “below center of gravity” versus “side of the knee” isn’t a conscious decision.
The issue is consistency. One hit gets called “unfortunate” even though it drew a targeting penalty, while another is labeled “dirty” despite no flag and no rule violation. That’s outcome-based judgment, not intent.