I know for USF home games alcohol is served, since they play at Raymond James Stadium (Buccaneers stadium). I think it may be more of a venue by venue thing.I always thought the restriction on alcohol sales was done on a conference by conference basis. I know the Big 12/NCAA always made the Sprint Center here in Kansas City stop their beer sales during the Big 12 basketball tournament, same with no beer sales at Arrowhead during MU/ku football games, or the Big 12 championship game.
Did something change to now put that decision back in the hands of individual schools? I just assumed West Virginia was already doing it because they were in a podunk conference before that allowed it, and the B12 just grandfathered in their allowance of it, since they were already doing it when they joined.
About damn time I say.
I liked the part where he called you idiots "idiots".I think they went about it the wrong way. Trying to make it a player safety issue is dumb. They should just give the defense the right to sub every time there's a first down so there's still a strategic aspect to it. Right now the tempo bullshit has created a dumbed down version of the game, whether you want to acknowledge it or not. And I say that as a person who loves football and has a coach who runs the same tempo FASTER FASTER bullshit as most of you idiots.
There is already a mechanism in place for teams to do so.....called a time out.I think they went about it the wrong way. Trying to make it a player safety issue is dumb. They should just give the defense the right to sub every time there's a first down so there's still a strategic aspect to it. Right now the tempo bullshit has created a dumbed down version of the game, whether you want to acknowledge it or not. And I say that as a person who loves football and has a coach who runs the same tempo FASTER FASTER bullshit as most of you idiots.
Obviously I mean that in the most affectionate way possible. Sort of.I liked the part where he called you idiots "idiots".
Do you hate watching Peyton Manning play football?You just made my point for me. The power of the HUNH isn't schematic, it's taking advantage of a loophole that helps every single form of offense and hurts every single form of defense. So my point about homogenization was only regarding defense(which is not a debatable point), and the NFL stuff where you kick a big end inside on pass downs or sub in a third safety or corner is much rarer in college because you have to be able to handle five or six plays in a row and if you put a fifth lineman in the game to stop a third down and they spread you out after they pick it up you are done. Unless you fall down and pretend you have a cramp.
Defenses have to get more versatile.You just made my point for me. The power of the HUNH isn't schematic, it's taking advantage of a loophole that helps every single form of offense and hurts every single form of defense. So my point about homogenization was only regarding defense(which is not a debatable point), and the NFL stuff where you kick a big end inside on pass downs or sub in a third safety or corner is much rarer in college because you have to be able to handle five or six plays in a row and if you put a fifth lineman in the game to stop a third down and they spread you out after they pick it up you are done. Unless you fall down and pretend you have a cramp.
Turning college football into WoW.It's homogenizing the game. Instead of sub packages and specialists on defense now it's all generalist and people just run three or four base defenses with a couple of different pressures. If you just go "OOOOH POINTS, PRETTY!" it's fine, but if you actually like the tactical aspects of the game it really limits how defenses can play.