[sumo] Re: [now definitely off-topic] Police To Charge Tokitsukaze Oyakata

Robert Hovestadt sherlockiama at gmail.com
Tue Oct 2 07:56:02 EDT 2007


There is no doubt if you watch enough football games [and I have both pro
and college] that far more illegal things happen than are called, but that
has always been the case.  The refs could throw a flag on pretty much every
play if they so chose.  While the things may be done intentionally, are they
done with the intent to injure? Some of the things could definitely cause
injury, but others it is unlikely.

On 10/1/07, Jeanne Hedge <jhedge at rcn.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> ---- Original message ----
> >Date: Mon, 01 Oct 2007 14:28:45 -0400
> >From: Kuramarujo <klemmerj at webtrek.com>
> >Subject: Re: [sumo] Re: [now definitely off-topic] Police To Charge
> Tokitsukaze Oyakata
> >To: Sumo Mailing List <sumo at webtrek.com>
> >
> >On Sat, 2007-09-29 at 08:40 +0900, Joe Petrow wrote:
> >
> >> In football, the following penalties, often done as a result of
> >> malice, result in a fifteen yard penalty, with the offending player
> >> staying in the game in most cases:
> >>
> >> * Chop block
> >> * Piling on
> >> * Roughing the kicker (intentionally)
> >> * Roughing the passer (intentionally)
> >> * Twisting, turning, or pulling an opponent by the facemask
> >
> >       Most of these penalties are unintentional.  Facemasking does have
> the
> >rare intentional perpetrator.  The chop block is only illegal because
> >the NFL, and subsequently the NCAA & HS Federation, didn't want players
> >to encounter career ending injuries.  In the NFL, this equates to a loss
> >of revenue.  And as we all know, money drives everything.
> >
> >K-jo, who was a master at the chop and crab blocks
>
> As the daughter and sister of guys who played offensive line in college, I
> have to disagree that those are unintentional, at least to a certain extent.
> According to them, on the line the rule is "do whatever you can get away
> with," and that most certainly does include chop blocks, piling on, face
> masking (and holding, biting, kicking, gouging, punching (especially to the
> throat)). I'm not saying these things are *always* done intentionally, but
> rather that what's actually called is only the proverbial tip of the iceberg
> of what's actually going on and not called or seen.
>
>
> Regards,
> Jeanne Hedge
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>


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