Ohio Vol
Inquisitor of Offense
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2006
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I am posting this as a former player, a current coach, a fan of football, and someone who has extensively studied sports-related injuries including head trauma.
After seeing live on TV a particular "block" thrown by one Brandon LaFell of LSU on Zach Davis of Mississippi State, I am convinced more than ever that an intentional hit in which the head/helmet is used as a weapon should be an automatic 15-yard penalty AND an automatic ejection (with mandatory league/conference review and power to impose suspensions).
The game of football is a rough one. In the context of a hard-fought and well-played game, injuries happen. Bones break, ligaments tear, fingers snap, tendons rupture, and occasionally brains get jolted. This, quite simply, is part of the game. It is inevitable that injuries will occur in a game as rough as football. I'm not calling for a myriad of rule changes or other radical measures in order to tone down hard physical play.
What I am calling for is a banishment of brutal headhunting cheap shots like those that Brandon LaFell administered. Watch it at full speed, watch it in slow motion, watch it paused and rewound. At no point did he attempt to extend his arms in order to deliver a block. He didn't even use his shoulder. No, LaFell simply lowered his head and rammed Zach Davis across the head with it, causing a frightening amount of impact to be delivered in a torquing manner. This was nothing more than a cheap shot; it was a flagrant attempt to injure and it succeeded.
Injuries happen as a result of hard play. There is NO room in the game of football for outrageous garbage such as this. I am calling on the NCAA, the NFHS, and all state governing bodies to draft legislation regarding the outlawing of flagrant head shots such as what was seen tonight. Spearing was made illegal years ago, and quite honestly the person spearing usually bore the brunt of the impact. Head shots are the opposite; the person ramming another player with a helmeted head is attempting to induce a concussion. A tackle is meant to separate the ballcarrier from the ball and a block is meant to separate the defensive player from his area; at no point is there room for something that is meant to separate any opponent from consciousness.
After seeing live on TV a particular "block" thrown by one Brandon LaFell of LSU on Zach Davis of Mississippi State, I am convinced more than ever that an intentional hit in which the head/helmet is used as a weapon should be an automatic 15-yard penalty AND an automatic ejection (with mandatory league/conference review and power to impose suspensions).
The game of football is a rough one. In the context of a hard-fought and well-played game, injuries happen. Bones break, ligaments tear, fingers snap, tendons rupture, and occasionally brains get jolted. This, quite simply, is part of the game. It is inevitable that injuries will occur in a game as rough as football. I'm not calling for a myriad of rule changes or other radical measures in order to tone down hard physical play.
What I am calling for is a banishment of brutal headhunting cheap shots like those that Brandon LaFell administered. Watch it at full speed, watch it in slow motion, watch it paused and rewound. At no point did he attempt to extend his arms in order to deliver a block. He didn't even use his shoulder. No, LaFell simply lowered his head and rammed Zach Davis across the head with it, causing a frightening amount of impact to be delivered in a torquing manner. This was nothing more than a cheap shot; it was a flagrant attempt to injure and it succeeded.
Injuries happen as a result of hard play. There is NO room in the game of football for outrageous garbage such as this. I am calling on the NCAA, the NFHS, and all state governing bodies to draft legislation regarding the outlawing of flagrant head shots such as what was seen tonight. Spearing was made illegal years ago, and quite honestly the person spearing usually bore the brunt of the impact. Head shots are the opposite; the person ramming another player with a helmeted head is attempting to induce a concussion. A tackle is meant to separate the ballcarrier from the ball and a block is meant to separate the defensive player from his area; at no point is there room for something that is meant to separate any opponent from consciousness.