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dermalogic posted:Thanks heaps for the feedback guys - I'll keep an eye on stubhub and see if I can jag a good seat for the giants game. It won't be "a little more". I would not be surprised if Eagles/Giants tickets were an order of magnitude more expensive than STL/SF.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 03:05 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:22 |
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Bit off topic but whatever: What's the UK equivalent to StubHub? Was thinking about skipping across the pond to see an EPL game sometime and was curious about ticket prices.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 04:37 |
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which site(s) is considered a good resource for a fantasy football newbie? It's my 2nd year and as of last year I've never watched a game of football in my life.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 20:49 |
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HKS posted:which site(s) is considered a good resource for a fantasy football newbie? It's my 2nd year and as of last year I've never watched a game of football in my life. The only sites I check are this one and rotoworld.com. In particular, Rotoworld's "Player News" page. You can narrow that by position and by team, too.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 22:04 |
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Probably a better question for the Armchair Quarterback forum, but footballguys.com does some very good projections and analysis in multiple league formats. ProFootballFocus also does good things with regards to projecting TD regression.
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 22:27 |
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Oh yeah I forgot the most important site i visit https://www.mygut.com just go with it
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# ? Aug 1, 2011 22:48 |
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Who should I follow on Twitter? Players, coaches, media, anything to keep me up to date and/or get a few chuckles out of me.
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# ? Aug 9, 2011 17:40 |
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internet inc posted:Who should I follow on Twitter? Players, coaches, media, anything to keep me up to date and/or get a few chuckles out of me. Ochocinco (though he's been pretty tame since going to NE), Adam Schefter, and Chris Kluwe.
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# ? Aug 9, 2011 20:14 |
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internet inc posted:Who should I follow on Twitter? Players, coaches, media, anything to keep me up to date and/or get a few chuckles out of me. Darnell Dockett e: Do NOT follow Deion Sanders. You'd think he'd be funny, but his Twitter is the worst.
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# ? Aug 9, 2011 21:28 |
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Alfred P. Pseudonym posted:Darnell Dockett quote:ddockett DARNELL DOCKETT
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# ? Aug 10, 2011 01:33 |
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Ozu posted:Probably a better question for the Armchair Quarterback forum, but footballguys.com does some very good projections and analysis in multiple league formats. ProFootballFocus also does good things with regards to projecting TD regression. The footballguys daily email digest is amazing, basically every piece of player news as well as their commentary on how it will affect fantasy leagues It's free until (I think) preseason ends, and is like 25 bucks for a year
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# ? Aug 12, 2011 13:55 |
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I signed up to Game Pass via NFL.com, and noticed that the mobile/tablet apps aren't out yet. What's their general track record for getting these kind of things done in time? Is it going to be 5 weeks into the season and 'welp, still no iPhone app' ?
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# ? Aug 12, 2011 17:22 |
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I'm moving into a new place on Monday, and this directv nfl sunday ticket deal is really starting to intrigue me and my friends. does anyone have it? is it worth the free $300 package to go with sattelite instead of weatherproof cable?
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# ? Aug 12, 2011 18:16 |
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volatile bowels posted:I'm moving into a new place on Monday, and this directv nfl sunday ticket deal is really starting to intrigue me and my friends. does anyone have it? is it worth the free $300 package to go with sattelite instead of weatherproof cable? Literally never had a single problem with satellite in the year and a half that I had it. This is in Houston, where it rains a lot (though it hasn't rained at all lately). My dad has had Sunday ticket for a few years now and it pretty much owns. With cable providers you can only get the Red Zone Channel, if that.
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 00:38 |
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Eric Berry comes up with some gems sometimesStuntman1429 posted:Dear one of my neighbors.(If ur on twitter). I can't remember my Parkin spot so I might b in yours.please don't tow me. Just park in mine.
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 16:14 |
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Alfred P. Pseudonym posted:Darnell Dockett Oh wow, Darnell is sure is a character.
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 16:53 |
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Hey, I was wondering, has a gridiron-team always been divided into two teams, offensive and defensive? Or did it start out as one team where everyone played both sides? If so, when did that happen? I tried reading up on it but couldn't find this out, thanks:)
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 20:32 |
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Midget Fist posted:Hey, I was wondering, has a gridiron-team always been divided into two teams, offensive and defensive? Or did it start out as one team where everyone played both sides? If so, when did that happen? I tried reading up on it but couldn't find this out, thanks:) Used to be that guys would play multiple positions between offense, defense and special teams. Sammy Baugh played QB, DB, and punter back in the 30s, for instance.
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 20:44 |
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Midget Fist posted:Hey, I was wondering, has a gridiron-team always been divided into two teams, offensive and defensive? Or did it start out as one team where everyone played both sides? If so, when did that happen? I tried reading up on it but couldn't find this out, thanks:) It's called playing ironman and it used to happen all the time. It still does in peewee to highschool depending on how good an athlete is but come highschool time you're really picking a specialty and spending almost all of your time there.
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 20:58 |
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Bashez posted:It's called playing ironman and it used to happen all the time. It still does in peewee to highschool depending on how good an athlete is but come highschool time you're really picking a specialty and spending almost all of your time there. Unless you went to an awful school like mine and can hardly get 20 people suited up and eligible for game day.
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 21:18 |
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Midget Fist posted:Hey, I was wondering, has a gridiron-team always been divided into two teams, offensive and defensive? Or did it start out as one team where everyone played both sides? If so, when did that happen? I tried reading up on it but couldn't find this out, thanks:) Platooning was started in the 30s when they loosened up on the substitution rules. Fritz Crisler was one of the pioneers in the separation of offensive and defensive units.
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 21:49 |
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Midget Fist posted:Hey, I was wondering, has a gridiron-team always been divided into two teams, offensive and defensive? Or did it start out as one team where everyone played both sides? If so, when did that happen? I tried reading up on it but couldn't find this out, thanks:) I is attached to the unlimited substitutions allowed in football. Originally there were substitution rules similar to those in soccer or rugby, but for the last 40 or so years unlimited substitution has lead to the creation of the two platoon system. Wiki article that gives a little more background: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-platoon_system
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# ? Aug 13, 2011 21:52 |
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Ah ok thanks! I figured it had to have started like rugby but wondered how and when/why it changed. Thanks for the wiki link too, I wouldn't have known what to look for!
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# ? Aug 14, 2011 02:16 |
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commy gun posted:Used to be that guys would play multiple positions between offense, defense and special teams. Sammy Baugh played QB, DB, and punter back in the 30s, for instance. He held the passing and punting record in the same season My Grandad remembers this, he is old as poo poo, also, awesome.
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# ? Aug 14, 2011 04:22 |
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NattyBo posted:He held the passing and punting record in the same season Didn't he lead in interceptions that year too? Inaugural class of the Hall of Fame, brah.
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# ? Aug 14, 2011 21:12 |
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Well I can't find the rules thread anymore and this is a basic enough question that I'll ask it here. Micheal Spurlock (the receiver at the bottom end of the screen) catches a TD pass after pushing the defender off his feet in the following video. http://www.nfl.com/videos/nfl-game-highlights/09000d5d8216cc27/Micheal-Spurlock-3-yard-TD Isn't that offensive pass interference? He pushed the defender to gain separation, literally pushing him off his feet. Or is that not considered pass interference, an idea I'm leaning towards since there was a referee not 10 feet away and he didn't call anything.
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# ? Aug 15, 2011 00:22 |
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DarciisFyer posted:Well I can't find the rules thread anymore and this is a basic enough question that I'll ask it here. I'm no expert or anything, but I think it's because you're allowed to make contact within 5 yards (or some other small amount) of the line of scrimmage (such as DBs jamming receivers at the line) and the contact was also before the ball was thrown.
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# ? Aug 15, 2011 02:18 |
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edit: Rules questions may now be redirected to the brand-new rules thread. Well, there's no closeup of what happened, but assuming he does actually touch the guy it's probably OPI (OPI rules apply from the snap through to when the pass is complete); the only reasoning against it I can think of is if the covering official sees the defender go to initiate contact and then falls over because he got more back than he was expecting or he was off-balance or tripped or something. Hard to say because there's no close-up. Thing is, that call's not for the guy who's standing right there, he's got another man to cover and also he's supposed to be getting to the goal line (and is going to get dinged hard for moving off it and signalling TD from the 3 instead of backwards when the ball came towards him, which is something you Do Not Do Ever). That one's for the guy at the back corner on that side (unless they've fiddled the keys around for these 8-man crews that they're trialling, which is certainly not impossible), and initial action is always the hardest to pick up for deep wings, especially when it's on the inside shoulder, because a lot of the time a corner who's playing up tight will line up in the exact place as to screen you out from the initial contact. Trin Tragula fucked around with this message at 12:45 on Aug 16, 2011 |
# ? Aug 15, 2011 09:06 |
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Does TFF have an IRC channel?
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# ? Aug 17, 2011 15:10 |
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Coughing-up Tweed posted:Does TFF have an IRC channel? #sports on irc.synirc.net
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# ? Aug 17, 2011 16:26 |
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SteelAngel2000 posted:#sports on irc.synirc.net Just to be clear here it's a lot different than the forums. Like completely different in all ways.
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# ? Aug 17, 2011 23:03 |
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So I searched here and a few other sites. Has the NFL decided what they are going to do with the captain designation this year? They introduced it 5 seasons ago, and there is only 4 star outlines on the uniform. Are they going to give out gold stars, or just keep the 5-timers club at 4 before the new uniform roll-out next year?
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# ? Aug 17, 2011 23:58 |
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Stupid question so i figure it fits here best. For instances where they need to bring out chains, or a QB sneak into a giant pile where you can't see the ball well, why don't they start chipping balls? Wouldn't then they be able to tell 100% if it got the 1st down or if it actually crossed the goal line?
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# ? Aug 19, 2011 16:54 |
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Crunkjuice posted:Stupid question so i figure it fits here best. For instances where they need to bring out chains, or a QB sneak into a giant pile where you can't see the ball well, why don't they start chipping balls? Wouldn't then they be able to tell 100% if it got the 1st down or if it actually crossed the goal line? The "chipping balls" discussion has picked up steam in the past few years, but the simple answer is that they don't actually know whether the technology is up to the task yet. They haven't tested it and there's some doubt that it's actually as magically precise as it's proponents claim it to be.
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# ? Aug 19, 2011 17:10 |
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Dominion posted:The "chipping balls" discussion has picked up steam in the past few years, but the simple answer is that they don't actually know whether the technology is up to the task yet. They haven't tested it and there's some doubt that it's actually as magically precise as it's proponents claim it to be. As opposed to the precision of dudes with chains following around an umpire who strolls up to wherever feels right and places the ball
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# ? Aug 19, 2011 18:53 |
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atlas of bugs posted:As opposed to the precision of dudes with chains following around an umpire who strolls up to wherever feels right and places the ball Yeah, actually. The argument that I have heard against is that right now we're accustomed to the fact that there is human judgement and occasional error in football, and we are used to it. If you put a chipped ball in that works 90% of the time, what do you do when it's wrong? Do you accept beforehand that the ball is always right and never question it? Do you have refs second-guess it anyway? When the runner very clearly goes down on the 1 but the end zone lights up anyway, who is the final say? If the final say is a human how is that better than what we do now?
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# ? Aug 19, 2011 19:40 |
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I'd also point out that unless you're going to have every spot given by a magical field that can tell when body parts other than hands and feet are hitting it and a magical ball that knows whether it's being held by somebody and whether it's inbounds or out, human judgement would still be involved in working out where the ball got to in the first place. Bottom line; NFL and NCAA conferences are perfectly happy with the accuracy of spots given by their officials, plus there's an absolutely brilliant inherent drama involved in the ritual of bringing the chain out for a measurement. Necessity is the mother of invention, and there's absolutely no need to fill.
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# ? Aug 19, 2011 20:54 |
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I should clarify that I'm not actually in favor of chips-in-balls, but aware of the role the illusion of precision plays in popular sport.
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# ? Aug 19, 2011 20:58 |
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That's why I hate this new ever-touchdown-review rule. There's human error in sports, that's why we have the challenge flag. They should've let you keep a challenge if you get one correct, and left it at that. Now they just slow down the game
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# ? Aug 20, 2011 16:15 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:22 |
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What's a good way to get more informed about the outlooks of college teams before the season starts? The old man at Walgreens tonight said he thinks that Arizona is going to make the Rose Bowl this year, and then asked me what I thought, and I really didn't want to say "well, the guys on the Something Awful forums think they're going to be pretty mediocre this year." I picked up an SI preview of the Pac 12 that seems ok, but SI is notoriously not good at breaking down basketball seasons and I'm not sure if I should really put a lot of stock in them. Also I would like to know about more than the Pac 12.
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# ? Aug 21, 2011 11:47 |