sarktastic
New Fish
You suck at this. Grow the hell up and learn the difference between a blindside block and a crack-back block. Here's the NFL definition of a blindside block that is used by NCAA officials because the NCAA was too stupid to copy/paste this shit into their rules: A player who receives a “blindside” block when the blocker is moving toward his own endline and approaches the opponent from behind or from the side. Chest was wrong. The fans don't know shit about the rules and we need Mike Pereira to explain this shit to you guys: http://www.foxsports.com/nfl/video/pereira-explaining-blind-side-blocks-100514?vid=338078787834
Which part, exactly, do I suck at? Quoting the exact words used by the mic'd head referee on the field at the time he made the call? Or block quoting from an article defining "crackback" blocks, "defenseless" players, and "targeting?"
My point, in this post and others, is that it was an utterly indefensible call. Nothing about Perkins's play satisfies the definitions of any of the terminology used by the ref who made the call on the field.
That's a blindside block, not a crackback block.
If the ref said crackback, fire his ass on the 50 yard line.
We all know it's a bad call.
How can a blindside block be called when the player prior to being blocked looks up at the guy moving in to block him, only to turn his attention back to the ball carrier before impact?
If this is a true interpretation of the rule, doesn't every inside counter run now by this definition, contain a blindside block?
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