Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim D
This is very unusual in my experience. Big games like cross-town rivals or a match of high-ranked teams normally are easy to work and have very few penalties. I think it's because the players are too busy trying to win and to aware of the consequences of a dumb penalty to do anything stupid. In the case of top teams, they are better players (less need to hold, etc.) and better coached. I'm really suprised you would have a game like this with that many fouls. For me, it seems the norm to have a game like that with maybe two or three flags all night. It's the uneven blow outs that become flag fests.
Do you have any theories why your game was like that?
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Not really. There were some tiebreak situations, but basically the winner of this game went to the playoffs and the loser did not, so there may have been some extra anticipation at the line and trying get away with bending the rules. Here are the penalties in order from most to least:
False start by OL (seven)
Defensive line offsides (three)
Offensive holding (three)
Illegal block in the back (three)
6 men on LOS (three)
UC (three, the last one with an ejection)
DPI (two)
2 backs in motion (two)
Running into the punter
Kickoff OOB
Chop block
Illegal substitution
Defensive holding
Ineligible man downfield
12 men on the field after the snap
Running into the kicker
After listening to the tape, the only ones none of us in the booth saw was one of the offensive holdings and one DPI. But they very easily could have happened. But every other infraction was definitely an accurate call by the officials.
A wild game with two lead changes in the fourth quarter and the winning team intercepting a pass in the end zone with 30 seconds left. But the players committed way too many fouls.