In 1905, responding to many deaths and serious injuries on the football field, President Teddy Roosevelt called upon intercollegiate football to reform its rules. In 1906, the forward pass was allowed, in order to open up the game. In 1913, the effective use of the forward pass by Notre Dame in its high-scoring thrashing of top-ranked Army irreparably split football from its Rugby heritage by making the forward pass an essential part of the American game.
This season is the 100th anniversary of the forward pass.
Sometimes I think that the forward pass did more harm than good to the game, because an incomplete pass leads to a long stoppage of play. A 50% completion rate makes for a long, boring ass game. But completion rates above that are difficult to manage, even in the professional ranks.
Recently, some passing attacks have managed to put together a string of completion rates above 60%, and those attacks are very fun to watch. This has given me hope that a big transformation of the game has taken place. But the amount of practice needed to accomplish this is rather extreme. It seems as if many of the serious high school and college programs now play 7-on-7 "skelly" almost year-round.
So the question is, do you think that it is realistic to raise the completion percentages across the board enough so that the forward pass is more consistently enjoyable to watch? Or do you think that it is all futile, and we would be further ahead getting rid of the forward pass?
This season is the 100th anniversary of the forward pass.
Sometimes I think that the forward pass did more harm than good to the game, because an incomplete pass leads to a long stoppage of play. A 50% completion rate makes for a long, boring ass game. But completion rates above that are difficult to manage, even in the professional ranks.
Recently, some passing attacks have managed to put together a string of completion rates above 60%, and those attacks are very fun to watch. This has given me hope that a big transformation of the game has taken place. But the amount of practice needed to accomplish this is rather extreme. It seems as if many of the serious high school and college programs now play 7-on-7 "skelly" almost year-round.
So the question is, do you think that it is realistic to raise the completion percentages across the board enough so that the forward pass is more consistently enjoyable to watch? Or do you think that it is all futile, and we would be further ahead getting rid of the forward pass?
Comment