- Joined
- Feb 7, 2013
- Messages
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You think 56 feet of space is enough for punting? You are now officially the last person on the planet I would ask for a measurement from.
To answer the question, no, you can't punt in there full out.
3M for naming right to the field. 1M to pay off CG to get the thing opened in August. Who cares what the other 2M are for!
56' ceiling means our punters will get better at kicking for distance. Feagles sure had a ton of hang time on some kicks that weren't meant for inside the 20. NFL requirement is 85'.
I Was wrong on that but apparently not many ipfs are capable of doing punting inside them.
Height of facilities is slowly creeping up, which is more a matter of bragging rights than true necessity. Typical field houses range from 55 to 65 feet at their zenith, a practical choice that accommodates nearly all practice activities. "You have a choice of punting or not punting," says Robert Fatovic, vice president at Washington, D.C.-based CannonDesign, citing the current benchmark for punting, the 90-foot-high video board at AT&T Stadium, home of the Dallas Cowboys.
Designing the Modern College Football Practice Facility - Athletic Business
You know fellas, they have these things called punting/kicking nets.
I’m sure you’ve seen them before. They’re always used at games on the sidelines, and also used outdoors during regular practices as well, to work the leg(s).
Why shoot, I’ll bet there’s enough in the budget to include one indoors, so they don’t have to drsg the outdoors one into the IPF.
