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NCAA committee proposals hope to shorten football games

cigaretteman

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May 29, 2001
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Georgia coach Kirby Smart says proposed changes to clock operating rules shouldn’t significantly impact college football games next season, but he called them a good first step to reducing the number of plays in the name of player health and safety.


The NCAA Football Rules Committee on Friday approved a proposal to keep the clock running when a team makes a first down except in the last two minutes of a half. Since 1968, the clock has stopped on a first down until the referee gives the ready-for-play signal.

The committee forwarded two other proposals to keep games moving. One would have penalties that are accepted at the end of the first and third quarters enforced at the start of the following quarter rather than having an untimed down. The other would take away the option for a coach to call back-to-back timeouts during the same dead ball period.


“We think the changes are going to be very minimal here,” said Smart, the committee co-chair. “You could say, Why did you change it at all? It’s going to flow better.”

The committee gave no serious consideration to a proposal to keep the clock running after an incomplete pass.



The proposed changes would go into effect in the 2023 season if approved by the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel on April 20.

Steve Shaw, NCAA secretary-rules editor and national coordinator of officials, said the rules committee took a conservative approach to begin the process of shortening games.

With the College Football Playoff expanding from four to 12 teams in 2024-25, and possibly more in the future, conference commissioners had asked the committee to look for ways to cut down on the number of plays in games in an attempt to mitigate potential injury exposures.

Shaw said the new clock rule on first downs would take about eight plays out of the game, which would be about 96 fewer exposures over a regular season and more for teams that play in bowls and the playoff.


The NFL keeps the clock running on first downs the entire game, and Shaw said keeping the old rule in place the last two minutes of halves represents a “beautiful difference” between the pro and college games.

“Those last two minutes are critical,” Shaw said. “By stopping the clock it gives teams and opportunity to make a comeback. Everybody on the committee was resolute: we’re not going directly to the NFL rule.”

In a move that mostly affects Divisions II and III, the committee approved the optional use of instant replay in games that do not have a replay official. It would allow the referee to use available video to make decisions on reviewable plays after a coach challenge.

Also, with some exceptions, drones will not be allowed over the playing surface or the team area when teams are on the field.

 
The only way to seriously reduce game times is reducing commercial breaks. End of story. Every NFL game ends in 3 ish hours while college is nearly 4 now.
Maybe they should mandate that you can't snap the ball until under 20 seconds on the play clock? The increase in hurry up, passing games is the cause of all of the extra plays. If player safety is truly your concern, that would allow substitutions freely throughout the game when a player needs a break. Think how many injuries that would save at MSU and PSU each game. ;)
 
Seems that everyone in the thread knows the obvious issue with run times. Commercials are out of control. Good luck fixing the lag in younger viewers when they basically take football breaks from commercials.
 
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It’s the damn west-coast, always in the gun, pass 60+ times/game that skew the game length. When there is no running the ball there is no clock being run continuously.

I came to watch me some dang football dang’nabit. Not some girly flag bullshit!

I say if you don’t run at least 34%+ then you forfeit Bowl eligibility and your ballsack. You earn it back by either running more or keeping 1 FB on your roster who is a team captain and who gets reps.

End of rant.
 
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Let's do continuous clock with stoppage time like soccer
I would love to be the ref in the National Championship game with Bama down 4 in extra time and a ball carrier streaking unimpeded down the sideline, and blow the whistle right when gets to about the 5…
 
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