- Thread starter
- #1
jayfan
{firestan}
My take.
THE GOOD: Owners passed a new OT format allowing both teams at least one possession. Even if Team A scores a TD, Team B will now get the ball. If the game is still tied after Team B's first possession, then it becomes sudden death until time expires.
THE BAD: The OT period will remain 10 minutes long. The initial proposal of the rule change included extending the OT period from 10 to 15 minutes to better accommodate the guaranteed possession, but the owners rejected that part. This is a problem. With a 10 minute limit, and only 2 timeouts per team, Team A could conceivably milk nearly all the clock on its first possession. The extra 5 minutes would have alleviated this.
If you're changing the rules so that both teams get a possession, then take steps to ensure that both teams actually get a legitimate possession.
THE GOOD: Owners passed a new OT format allowing both teams at least one possession. Even if Team A scores a TD, Team B will now get the ball. If the game is still tied after Team B's first possession, then it becomes sudden death until time expires.
THE BAD: The OT period will remain 10 minutes long. The initial proposal of the rule change included extending the OT period from 10 to 15 minutes to better accommodate the guaranteed possession, but the owners rejected that part. This is a problem. With a 10 minute limit, and only 2 timeouts per team, Team A could conceivably milk nearly all the clock on its first possession. The extra 5 minutes would have alleviated this.
If you're changing the rules so that both teams get a possession, then take steps to ensure that both teams actually get a legitimate possession.
Last edited: