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Old Mon Oct 20, 2008, 05:02pm
Ed Hickland Ed Hickland is offline
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Without saying whether you were right or wrong, consider with 4.5 seconds the offense wants to use every one-hundredth of a second. Maybe, just maybe, rather than using a snap count, it could be they go on the whistle itself.

The RFP is a signal that the ball is ready. My personal preference is to blow a long ready whistle if I think my crew needs that extra tick to be in position which makes it harder for the QB to call out signals. In this situation the offense is ready and the sound of the whistle indicates they can snap.
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Last edited by Ed Hickland; Mon Oct 20, 2008 at 05:49pm.
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