It’s the TV timeouts that last forever.
Your first sentence is spot on. Games being longer are only slightly extended because of actual play. I suggest have the commercial breaks at the end of the quarters, half time, when players are injured, or when the game is actually stopped for a valid reason. I can not recall how many times I sat in the stands and yelled "Lets's get this game rolling".College football games are not too long because of the rules.
Here's an idea - No commercial breaks after turnovers. Problem solved without ******* up the greatest game we have going.
What would you deem not a reviewable play? Targeting, catches, turnovers and scoring plays are on my list of things that have to stay. Those are game changing. I’m iffy on first down spots, they might could go.I hold the unpopular opinion that instant replay sucks. Bad calls are part of the game. Yet now we have to wait 10 minutes for a ref to review a call and still somehow get it wrong. And if you add up all the replay reviews plus challenges, there are stoppages lasting several minutes at least 10 times a game. I think there should be fewer reviewable plays, with the exception of targeting because it's a health issue (and there should be a lesser penalty for inadvertent contact with the head).
CFB has sold its soul, its parents’ souls, its children’s souls, its nieces and nephews and neighbors’ dog’s souls for the nose candy of ad revenue. It is never, *ever*, going to reduce the flow of spice.lol that people are suggesting they cut the ads as if that has a ******* chance in **** of happening
this better be a joke.This one is stupid. Everything else I'm ok with.
Clocks runs on incompletions once ball is spotted
Which part?this better be a joke.
running clock after an incompleteWhich part?
all true I’m purely commenting on the idea that ads will be cut. Pro and college football- live sports- are basically the last ads in the us that will ever be cut. Period. That’s reality. They may evolve (think the split screen 30 seconds with game cam still on ) but they are the last events drawing consistent mass ratings and as such they can and will continue to use and abuse the viewersCFB has sold its soul, its parents’ souls, its children’s souls, its nieces and nephews and neighbors’ dog’s souls for the nose candy of ad revenue. It is never, *ever*, going to reduce the flow of spice.
That said, there are many ways to shorten the length of games without compromising the sport any further. I’d be in favor of some of them, although I don’t see what this has to do with slowing offenses down. Like, Josh Heupel doesn't care if your rules means he snaps at 27 or 21 seconds. The same amount of real time has elapsed. Maybe they mean “limit” with regard to possessions, but if anything this hurts plodding Os more. Once they get behind they’ll have less clock to play with.a