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Post by ag87 on Feb 15, 2022 10:36:41 GMT -8
In college stats, kneel downs are assigned to the "team." It's different in the NFL?
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Post by Judge Smails on Feb 15, 2022 10:43:29 GMT -8
In college stats, kneel downs are assigned to the "team." It's different in the NFL? It seems like a kneel down should count against his passing yards. That is how sacks are accounted for in the NFL. However, maybe a kneel down is different, since there is obviously no passing attempt.
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Post by spudbeaver on Feb 15, 2022 11:05:02 GMT -8
In college stats, kneel downs are assigned to the "team." It's different in the NFL? It seems like a kneel down should count against his passing yards. That is how sacks are accounted for in the NFL. However, maybe a kneel down is different, since there is obviously no passing attempt. Good question. Kneel down
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Post by Judge Smails on Feb 15, 2022 11:16:54 GMT -8
It seems like a kneel down should count against his passing yards. That is how sacks are accounted for in the NFL. However, maybe a kneel down is different, since there is obviously no passing attempt. Good question. Kneel downOK. I thought for sure sacks counted as negative passing yards against the QB, but maybe that changed.
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Post by kersting13 on Feb 18, 2022 10:56:45 GMT -8
OK. I thought for sure sacks counted as negative passing yards against the QB, but maybe that changed. Nothing has changed. In the NFL: Sacks have always gone against TEAM passing yards, NOT QB passing yards. QB rushing attempts, positive or negative, have always applied to QB rushing yards, never team rushing, including kneel downs. NCAA kneel downs go against team rushing yards, that may have changed in the past 20 years, but QB sacks go against QB rushing yards. Yep, the differences are weird.
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