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Post by groundchuck on May 23, 2014 9:42:35 GMT -6
For those of you with experience with hurry up no huddle or HUNH offenses, do the games take longer?
If the team or teams running HUNH are predominantly run (70% run) why would the game take more time to complete. The clock would be running.
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Post by coachphillip on May 23, 2014 10:45:22 GMT -6
I don't think the game takes longer based on whether a team is HUNH or not. Games are longer any time: 1) there are a lot of incompletions, 2) there are a lot of touchdowns, 3) there are a lot of old, lardy refs on the field.
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Post by larrymoe on May 23, 2014 12:58:15 GMT -6
Our games have decreased in length as we went away from no huddle hurry up. Why? I don't know.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 23, 2014 13:41:35 GMT -6
More plays=more reasons to stop play, even if you are no huddle. TDs, out of bounds, injuries, etc. Hypothetically, these things should all increase with increased snaps.
If your opponent throws more incompletions in the longer game, that also stops the clock.
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Post by rudyrude9 on May 23, 2014 14:10:30 GMT -6
Definatly longer. Thats why these college games don't fit into the 3 hour TV window anymore. This only applies when the game is close and there is no running clock involved.
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Post by powerfootball71 on May 23, 2014 14:24:28 GMT -6
I'd say longer for shure. I can defently say breaking down a hudl film of 2 no huddle teams playing each other takes significantly longer where a few film last year that where right under the 200 play range.
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Post by semi-pro64 on May 23, 2014 14:33:53 GMT -6
I use to be a no huddle hurry up guy, then I came a defensive coordinator. Now I'm back on the offensive side of the ball and because we have a lot of kids that go both ways, I think it is important to shorten the game for us thus I have moved away from hurry up. As a defensive coordinator, I got tired of three pass plays and only 30 seconds had come off the clock. If you have the numbers for hurry up, it makes sense but for us not so much.
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