RRyder823 wrote:The idea that Dallas egregiously mismanaged the clock is laughable. Never mind that they were less then a balls length away from being stopped on 4th down just a couple of plays earlier. You put it in the end zone when you get the chance. It really is as simple as that.
Take a knee at the one or a holding penalty or a goal line stand later, neither of which are impossibilitys, and it's one of the dumbest decisions in history.
Have people never watched a football game before?
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Nah. This is just sporks speak once again. If you are a man of statistics and probabilities, taking a knee is playing the percentages. Again, something isn't dumb because it's unorthodox. There are common practices in the NFL that statisticians have proved dumb time and time again, most egregious is that there are far too many punts.
I'm not necessarily advocating taking a knee. What I, and the talking heads are saying, and are correct in, is that the 2nd down pass was stupid. GB was showing absolutely no ability to stop Elliott at this point in the game. They should have been running until they had to pass. He most likely gets tackled trying to score, and ONE more play with a running clock takes a TD out of the equation for GB. It was a stupid call, made dumber when it fell incomplete and gave the Packers a clock-stopping present.
It's disingenuous to say they were a balls' length from getting stopped when it was a play designed to get a couple of feet. They hadn't stopped Zeke at all in the 2nd half.
Advocating scoring immediately because you might get a penalty or fumble is classic human psychology of playing to a fear that is far less likely to happen than just running it out and scoring. Again, not advocating that, but all you do by scoring is remove immediate disaster, but you leave GB a chance. The far higher percentage play is 4 runs from inside the 5 and eating up all the clock.