volsunghawk
New member
byau":2ls959bu said:twisted_steel2":2ls959bu said:byau":2ls959bu said:I don't like the OT rule either. To be fair, both teams should have a shot
That being said, that's the current rule, Broncos knew they needed to stop the TD. Hawks earn the win.
Both teams had a shot for 60 minutes.
Just not buying it folks.
I'm shortening the quote on your post since this summarizes it well. Hope you don't mind
This is a good point. However, for me, in the spirit of fair competitive play, I like the idea that the overtime period is like a new game and each team will get at least one shot.
In your way of thinking, you are saying since both teams had a fair shot in regulation, when it comes to overtime you should flip a coin to see who goes first and first team to score wins.
No other sport I can think of off the top of my head does this. If there is one, it's in the minority. The few sports I can think of quickly off the top of my head gives each team a fair shot once a post-regulation period starts (aka overtime)
Whether it is a fixed period like basketball, fixed period and goal kicks like Soccer, or extra innings like Baseball.
Imagine basketball OT: flip a coin to see who gets the ball first and first bucket wins
Imagine Soccer goal kicks: flip a coin to see which team kicks first, first goal wins
At this point it may be just difference in opinion: your opinion is that each team had its shot in regulation, now let's up the stakes and make it first team to score and start it by luck with a coin flip. My opinion: I like seeing overtime as a brand new game, and each team somehow gets a shot.
None of those games have the level of contact that football does, so playing an extra period isn't the physical challenge that you see in football. If you had said hockey, I could see the argument working better. With that said, I would support a full extra period over any trumped-up system that placed the ball at a specific location on the field or gave equal possessions out of a sense of "fairness."
I absolutely disagree with the view of OT as a "brand new game." You don't get a tie based on the first 4 quarters and then a win on top of it if you come out on top in OT. It's a single game. And for a long time in the NFL, teams tied at the end of regulation just got a tie. That's it. OT was provided to reduce the number of ties and to provide some extra drama in the effort to decide a victor. I believe the sudden death element was included to increase the stakes AND make OT games as short as possible to limit potential injuries that might occur in the extra period.