OT: The Pittsburgher Thread: Sneaking up onto training camp

  • PLEASE check any bookmark on all devices. IF you see a link pointing to mandatory.com DELETE it Please use this URL https://forums.hfboards.com/

Buddy Bizarre

Registered User
Jul 9, 2021
6,119
4,335
“Quick, someone invent a new rule that benefits the offense!”

The NFL is too smart to make something up this explicit.

Want to know what they'll do instead? Stop calling penalties on the offenses.

That's why you see the tackles moving before the snap and illegal formation called early in the year. People saw it called on the first game of the year and in prime time. You'll slowly see it called less and less during the season and the NFL's PR department will go "Teams have adjusted to what's being called" but you still have plenty of tape to prove otherwise.

More penalties on the defense and less on the offensive side. It gooses offenses and prevents QB's from getting killed. That is Goodell's wet dream.
 

MrBrightside

Registered User
May 5, 2010
5,661
3,501
Franklin Park, PA
That's the remarkable thing about the offenses falling off a cliff - the QB injuries that invariably will occur and lead to Easton Stick v. Tyson Bagent matchups in November have not set in yet. That's when it could get really ugly.
 

Peat

Registered User
Jun 14, 2016
30,131
25,807
I read in a thread on a different hip drop that the NFL has said they'll be enforcing hip-drop discipline more by after game discipline than by in game this season.
 

bigdaddyk88

Registered User
Apr 21, 2019
4,300
844
I read in a thread on a different hip drop that the NFL has said they'll be enforcing hip-drop discipline more by after game discipline than by in game this season.
Yes they are going to fine players after the game since they don’t believe the refs can call it correctly in real e
 

Buddy Bizarre

Registered User
Jul 9, 2021
6,119
4,335
I read in a thread on a different hip drop that the NFL has said they'll be enforcing hip-drop discipline more by after game discipline than by in game this season.

That's weird to me. How does doing it after the fact

1) Promote behavior change?
2) Help the team that is the "victim"?

The potential impact of the game at hand is more of a deterrent vs. getting fined after the contest. You're more likely to have players adjust after they get hit with a 15 yarder vs a miniscule fine.
 

NewAgeOutlaw

Belie Dat!
Jul 15, 2011
30,271
8,066
412/724
I'm not one to normally complain about safety rules in football but the hip drop stuff is just stupid.

If you don't want to get dragged down go down easy. There isn't a safe way to be tackled by a bunch of 230-310 lb athletes.

Are defenders supposed to let go when they wrap up and the person being tackled doesn't immediately go down?
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Buddy Bizarre

Buddy Bizarre

Registered User
Jul 9, 2021
6,119
4,335
I'm not one to normally complain about safety rules in football but the hip drop stuff is just stupid.

If you don't want to get dragged down go down easy. There isn't a safe way to be tackled by a bunch of 230-310 lb athletes.

Are defenders supposed to let go when they wrap up and the person being tackled doesn't immediately go down?

Yea I guess I just grew up in a different era where you brought the guy down by "any means necessary".

I never liked the horsecollar rule either.

But if you want to make rules, you better be prepared to enforce them. The NFL isn't (at least not in game)
 

Peat

Registered User
Jun 14, 2016
30,131
25,807
That's weird to me. How does doing it after the fact

1) Promote behavior change?
2) Help the team that is the "victim"?

The potential impact of the game at hand is more of a deterrent vs. getting fined after the contest. You're more likely to have players adjust after they get hit with a 15 yarder vs a miniscule fine.

I was puzzled too.

I'm not one to normally complain about safety rules in football but the hip drop stuff is just stupid.

If you don't want to get dragged down go down easy. There isn't a safe way to be tackled by a bunch of 230-310 lb athletes.

Are defenders supposed to let go when they wrap up and the person being tackled doesn't immediately go down?

You don't need to swing your body around to land on their ankles to drag down a guy that size. The game is never going to be perfectly safe but it's perfectly possible to make the tackle without doing that and it drastically increases the chance of injury - and half the time that's why people are doing it. Tackles on guys heading out of bounds already, tackles on QBs standing still, and the rest of it.
 

Pens x

Registered User
Oct 8, 2016
16,292
8,090
Khan absolutely s**** the bed when it comes to our receiver group. I hope these two wins against powder puff teams hasnt fooled him into thinking we are okay on offense.
 

WickedWrister

Registered User
Jul 25, 2008
10,315
4,921
Philadelphia
The NFL did a study and claimed there were 230 examples of hip drop tackles in 2023. Would've been the 4th highest volume penalty based on 2023 totals. By comparison, there were 173 unnecessary roughness penalties called last year.

It's just a difficult play to evaluate in real time. There's a degree of subjectivity in how the language is supposed to be interpreted too. It's not like the illegal formations that have been a point of emphasis where you can clearly see when an offensive lineman's helmet is not even with his center's waist.

I think there was maybe 1 called in week 1? I don't know about week 2. This leads me to believe that it's only going to be called when it's glaringly obvious or when a player gets injured as a result of it. But apparently not for Mixon 🤷‍♂️
 

NewAgeOutlaw

Belie Dat!
Jul 15, 2011
30,271
8,066
412/724
I was puzzled too.



You don't need to swing your body around to land on their ankles to drag down a guy that size. The game is never going to be perfectly safe but it's perfectly possible to make the tackle without doing that and it drastically increases the chance of injury - and half the time that's why people are doing it. Tackles on guys heading out of bounds already, tackles on QBs standing still, and the rest of it.

Do you have any idea how difficult it is to tackle somebody built like an NFL running back? These tackles happen because of physics, not ill intent.

If you really wanted to hurt someboy legally you go at the knees, not wrap up and drag down.

It is gruesome, but when one strong person tries to drag down another strong person sometimes feet get caught and bones/ligaments snap.

Anybody who has ever played a sport with tackling knows it can happen any time you play.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Buddy Bizarre

Buddy Bizarre

Registered User
Jul 9, 2021
6,119
4,335
Do you have any idea how difficult it is to tackle somebody built like an NFL running back? These tackles happen because of physics, not ill intent.

If you really wanted to hurt someboy legally you go at the knees, not wrap up and drag down.

It is gruesome, but when one strong person tries to drag down another strong person sometimes feet get caught and bones/ligaments snap.

Anybody who has ever played a sport with tackling knows it can happen any time you play.

Well put.
And you add the fact in a standard running play, the RB has all the speed/momentum vs the DLineman who is asked to fend off a 350lb guy then tackle a 220 lb guy who has about 7 yards of momentum.

That's hard to stop all that without contorting yourself into a pretzel yourself so you don't land/wrap up a guy in a particular way.
 

JTG

Registered User
Sep 30, 2007
50,774
5,918
The Saints are really good...with Derek Carr.

I think Fields is a more talented QB. I hope Carr can win one outside of Oakland.
 

Peat

Registered User
Jun 14, 2016
30,131
25,807
Do you have any idea how difficult it is to tackle somebody built like an NFL running back? These tackles happen because of physics, not ill intent.

If you really wanted to hurt someboy legally you go at the knees, not wrap up and drag down.

It is gruesome, but when one strong person tries to drag down another strong person sometimes feet get caught and bones/ligaments snap.

Anybody who has ever played a sport with tackling knows it can happen any time you play.

Played rugby union for fifteen odd years. It's not NFL tackling, and the level I played at didn't feature that many guys as jacked as NFL running back or tight end (but then I wasn't as jacked as an NFL linebacker) but I'm going to guess I've tackled as many people of that size as anyone in this thread.

You don't have to do a hip drop tackle. You don't have to do it to the point that it's not even banned in rugby union, because it barely happens.

The hip drop is not merely wrapping and dragging down. That's fine. It's the deliberate swinging round of the body that so the tackler's bodyweight lands on the target's ankles and traps them as they're going down. It's dangerous and frequently unnecessary. That's why the NFL banned it.
 

OnMyOwn

Worlds Apart
Sep 7, 2005
19,130
4,770
I used to “hip drop” all the time. It usually happened when I caught someone from behind and didn’t want them to gain any more yards by dragging my ass down the field. So I just held on to their waist and dropped my weight to the ground.

It wasn’t meant to be dirty, just stop forward progress. Otherwise a big dude is taking you for a ride downfield haha.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Buddy Bizarre

Peat

Registered User
Jun 14, 2016
30,131
25,807
I used to “hip drop” all the time. It usually happened when I caught someone from behind and didn’t want them to gain any more yards by dragging my ass down the field. So I just held on to their waist and dropped my weight to the ground.

It wasn’t meant to be dirty, just stop forward progress. Otherwise a big dude is taking you for a ride downfield haha.

If you dropped it to the ground and not their ankles, then you are not committing a hip drop tackle as the NFL has banned them.


edit:


So this is why they're not being called.

If only the NFL had a whole bunch of cameras on every play and a whole room full of people ready to review video.
 

OnMyOwn

Worlds Apart
Sep 7, 2005
19,130
4,770
If you dropped it to the ground and not their ankles, then you are not committing a hip drop tackle as the NFL has banned them.
Yea I couldn’t tell you. Landed wherever momentum took me and wherever their legs were at the time. I just know it was common. It’s really hard to wrap and drive through someone if you catch them from behind and want to stop their forward progress. All I’m getting at.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Buddy Bizarre

Peat

Registered User
Jun 14, 2016
30,131
25,807
Yea I couldn’t tell you. Landed wherever momentum took me and wherever their legs were at the time. I just know it was common. It’s really hard to wrap and drive through someone if you catch them from behind and want to stop their forward progress. All I’m getting at.

Not wrong there.

The thing is, if you can't say where you landed, you're probably not committing a hip drop tackle as per the NFL's three points, which are -

- Wrap the runner,
- Swivel his hips to move his body across the back of the runner,
- Unweight his body and drop, contacting and trapping the back of the legs, ankle or foot.

Pretty much all tackles are wrapping. The rest, that usually takes work. Like, if you're swiveling your hips, you know where you're landing, right? There's so many examples of behind or from the side tackles that don't involves it that, for all I get how difficult it is to tackle in these situations, I don't see how banning it is taking out some absolutely necessary part of a tackler's weaponry.
 
Last edited:

JTG

Registered User
Sep 30, 2007
50,774
5,918
Benton and Frazier have really solidified both sides of the ball. Frazier has made Daniels SO much better also. Seumalo should see another level also.

Frazier is currently ranked 20th in the NFL for C according to PFF. Currently Cam, Benton, Adams, and Loudermilk are all ranking top 50 in NFL according to PFF for defensive linemen.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Rave7215

Ad

Upcoming events

Ad

Ad