Perfect route - Perfect timing

#8
#8
I slowed the clip down to see if Hyatt got a foot down. (My eyes aren't as good as they once were). He actually got two feet down.

Anyone know why the NCAA doesn't follow the NFL on this particular rule, requiring one foot in bounds vs. two feet?

(I know there are other rules that are different between the NCAA and NFL --- just curious on this particular one)
 
#10
#10
I slowed the clip down to see if Hyatt got a foot down. (My eyes aren't as good as they once were). He actually got two feet down.

Anyone know why the NCAA doesn't follow the NFL on this particular rule, requiring one foot in bounds vs. two feet?

(I know there are other rules that are different between the NCAA and NFL --- just curious on this particular one)
Pros are required to be at the next level..hence they are required to get both feet down...just my take.
 
#11
#11
I slowed the clip down to see if Hyatt got a foot down. (My eyes aren't as good as they once were). He actually got two feet down.

Anyone know why the NCAA doesn't follow the NFL on this particular rule, requiring one foot in bounds vs. two feet?

(I know there are other rules that are different between the NCAA and NFL --- just curious on this particular one)

I don't know. But "2 feet down" never made sense to me. Seems to me the first thing that touches should determine in or out status. Just me.
 
#13
#13
These two were in high school at the time. Have you witnessed typical high school qbs and receivers ?? The qb floats the ball out there … usually late and the receiver rounds off his routes.
This is a high school qb with a cannon and a receiver that can turn on a dime.
Coming to a theater near you.
 
#14
#14
I don't know. But "2 feet down" never made sense to me. Seems to me the first thing that touches should determine in or out status. Just me.

Changing this rule to be one foot for the pros would be a better solution to boosting offense than ticky tack pass interference calls that infuriate fans and drive criticism to referees. Not sure why this hasn't happened yet.
 
#18
#18


Great route running, great timing hitting a receiver in stride coming out of his break. Ballers.


Very good, but not perfect. The ball was a little late. The receiver had to slow a little to wait for the pass. That would give the DB time to be in better position to knock it down.
 
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#21
#21
These two were in high school at the time. Have you witnessed typical high school qbs and receivers ?? The qb floats the ball out there … usually late and the receiver rounds off his routes.
This is a high school qb with a cannon and a receiver that can turn on a dime.
Coming to a theater near you.
excited
 
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