0 Members and 0 Guests are viewing this topic.
Eerily similar to Pats/Chiefs 2018.Now I better not hear Chiefs fans complain about OT rules lol.
Quote from: SparzWizard on January 23, 2022, 09:56:55 PMEerily similar to Pats/Chiefs 2018.Now I better not hear Chiefs fans complain about OT rules lol.If the Chiefs defensive player isn't lined up offsides on Brady's interception, that game never goes to overtime and the Chiefs win in regulation.
I'll have the unpopular opinion of saying the overtime rules are completely fine, as they favor balanced teams vs hyper offense teams. If you can stop your opponent from getting a touchdown, you don't deserve to win the game.
overtime rule stinks. to lose that game on a coin flip is awful.
Quote from: RPGenerate on January 23, 2022, 10:00:57 PMI'll have the unpopular opinion of saying the overtime rules are completely fine, as they favor balanced teams vs hyper offense teams. If you can stop your opponent from getting a touchdown, you don't deserve to win the game.It still largely hinges on a coin flip, though. OT didn’t tell us anything about who the better team was; if Buffalo got the ball first, they probably would have won.Give both teams the ball. That will lead to more great endings, like Buffalo going for two because they can’t stop the Chiefs.
Quote from: Roy H. on January 23, 2022, 10:08:59 PMQuote from: RPGenerate on January 23, 2022, 10:00:57 PMI'll have the unpopular opinion of saying the overtime rules are completely fine, as they favor balanced teams vs hyper offense teams. If you can stop your opponent from getting a touchdown, you don't deserve to win the game.It still largely hinges on a coin flip, though. OT didn’t tell us anything about who the better team was; if Buffalo got the ball first, they probably would have won.Give both teams the ball. That will lead to more great endings, like Buffalo going for two because they can’t stop the Chiefs.The Bills defense has the ability to make plays and stop the Chiefs offense. Everyone knows the stakes over overtime football. Saying “both teams should have a chance” means you’re taking away the defensive side of football. Chiefs have to score, bills have to stop them. It’s that simple.
Quote from: JohnBoy65 on January 23, 2022, 10:22:20 PMQuote from: Roy H. on January 23, 2022, 10:08:59 PMQuote from: RPGenerate on January 23, 2022, 10:00:57 PMI'll have the unpopular opinion of saying the overtime rules are completely fine, as they favor balanced teams vs hyper offense teams. If you can stop your opponent from getting a touchdown, you don't deserve to win the game.It still largely hinges on a coin flip, though. OT didn’t tell us anything about who the better team was; if Buffalo got the ball first, they probably would have won.Give both teams the ball. That will lead to more great endings, like Buffalo going for two because they can’t stop the Chiefs.The Bills defense has the ability to make plays and stop the Chiefs offense. Everyone knows the stakes over overtime football. Saying “both teams should have a chance” means you’re taking away the defensive side of football. Chiefs have to score, bills have to stop them. It’s that simple.Sure, defense matters. Give the Bills the ball and KC can shut them down.Why should only one team have to play defense?