Not for me. I'm not a regular beer drinker and the Dos Equis man looks and sounds like a jerk...Only when the Dos Equis commercials come on. [emoji481]
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Not for me. I'm not a regular beer drinker and the Dos Equis man looks and sounds like a jerk...Only when the Dos Equis commercials come on. [emoji481]
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I don't drink Dos Equis either - it just reminds me it's time to go get another beer [emoji6]Not for me. I'm not a regular beer drinker and the Dos Equis man looks and sounds like a jerk...
Having the coach initiate a review would do that. I guess I agree with the philosophy of review (on-the-field officials make a decision regardless and review looks at it to confirm/let stand or overturn. Giving the coaches one red flag/half would force the coaches to make a decision (is this worthy of a review? Is the call weak enough and is this particular play crucial enough?).Running clock with play out of bounds outside 2 minutes (once ball is set) and limit reviews. My opinion.
TMIThe commercials were so long Monday night that I had time to use the restroom (#2) and still did not miss a single play.
Would you volunteer to take a pay cut? Because that is what you are expecting college football to do. They are not going to reduce TV timeouts or any commercial breaks.Eliminate TV timeouts except for during TO on the field, change of quarter / half, etc and the games would shorten dramatically.
Haven't they already begun not stopping the clock when the ball carrier goes out of bounds unless it is the final two minutes of a half? They could keep the clock running on incomplete passes unless it is under two minutes in the half. That would seem to help, especially the defense. No team should be able to run 99 stinking plays in a 60 minute game.Would you volunteer to take a pay cut? Because that is what you are expecting college football to do. They are not going to reduce TV timeouts or any commercial breaks.
I don't like long games any more than everybody else. But the move to more pass happy offenses is extending the games.
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I think they did. I agree the only way to shorten games is to reduce game play time with ways like you suggested. But I am not sure I am comfortable with that for some reason.Haven't they already begun not stopping the clock when the ball carrier goes out of bounds unless it is the final two minutes of a half? They could keep the clock running on incomplete passes unless it is under two minutes in the half. That would seem to help, especially the defense. No team should be able to run 99 stinking plays in a 60 minute game.
I understand the economics behind it, but they can increase the fee per second of advertising.Would you volunteer to take a pay cut? Because that is what you are expecting college football to do. They are not going to reduce TV timeouts or any commercial breaks.