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The deal with the HUNH

Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:36 pm
Posted by Ton Chou
On the Levee
Member since Feb 2010
757 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:36 pm
Plain and simple it's not how the game was meant to be played. My guys against your guys, 4 downs to get 10 yards line up ready set go. HUNH is gimmicky and success because defenses aren't ready so it's more about are guys ready and in position vs can my guy beat your guy head up. He'll if that's what you want to see let's just have a game of kickoffs and see who returns the most in 60 minutes. It would be akin to a pitcher firing pitches as soon as the catcher throws the ball back regardless of if the batter is ready. It soils the integrity of the game.
Posted by UMRealist
Member since Feb 2013
35360 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:37 pm to
Posted by TheBob
Metairie
Member since Jun 2005
16935 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:37 pm to
Good cast
Posted by diddydirtyAubie
Bozeman
Member since Dec 2010
39829 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:37 pm to
quote:


Plain and simple it's not how the game was meant to be played.


Who designed the game? What did they say about how to play it?

What does this quote from John Heisman about his 1899 squad tell you?
quote:



The team of ’99—my last at Auburn—was a great one. It only weighed about 160 (pounds per player), but its speed and team work were something truly wonderful. I do not think I have ever seen so fast a team as that was. It would line up and get the ball in play at times before the opposing players were up off the ground. You see it was a ‘stunt’ of ours to catch them off side and get the benefit of the penalty. Nowadays no team is taken by surprise by such lightning lining up; but that Auburn team of ’99 was the first to show what could be done with speedy play, and then it wasn’t long before all other teams were laboring with might and main to inject speed into their work.
This post was edited on 3/1/14 at 7:39 pm
Posted by Phat Phil
Krispy Kreme
Member since May 2010
7372 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:37 pm to
Great, another cross divisional schedule I mean HUNH thread.
Posted by Ton Chou
On the Levee
Member since Feb 2010
757 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:40 pm to
Nobody forced you to read let alone reply to it.
Posted by diddydirtyAubie
Bozeman
Member since Dec 2010
39829 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:42 pm to
answer my post dammit.
Posted by achamb7
Lenoir City, TN
Member since Jun 2011
452 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:43 pm to
quote:



Posted by hawgfaninc
https://youtu.be/torc9P4-k5A
Member since Nov 2011
46317 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:43 pm to
quote:



Posted by UMRealist
Member since Feb 2013
35360 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:44 pm to
That's a fantastic quote
Posted by geauxnavybeatbama
Member since Jul 2013
25134 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:45 pm to
Damn, sorry I fat fingered the red arrow. My bad.
Posted by Liberty tiger13
Prairieville
Member since Jan 2014
531 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:47 pm to
Put your back into hook set. Quick snap over long pull.
Posted by diddydirtyAubie
Bozeman
Member since Dec 2010
39829 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:49 pm to
quote:


That's a fantastic quote


It's great for the "integrity" and "game wasn't meant to be played" crowd. The HUNH goes back 3 centuries.
Posted by hawgfaninc
https://youtu.be/torc9P4-k5A
Member since Nov 2011
46317 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:51 pm to
quote:

Plain and simple it's not how the game was meant to be played. My guys against your guys, 4 downs to get 10 yards line up ready set go. HUNH is gimmicky and success because defenses aren't ready so it's more about are guys ready and in position vs can my guy beat your guy head up. He'll if that's what you want to see let's just have a game of kickoffs and see who returns the most in 60 minutes. It would be akin to a pitcher firing pitches as soon as the catcher throws the ball back regardless of if the batter is ready. It soils the integrity of the game.

I came back and read

you get an upvote
Posted by kage
ATL
Member since Feb 2010
4068 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:54 pm to
quote:

My guys against your guys, 4 downs to get 10 yards line up ready set go. HUNH is gimmicky and success because defenses aren't ready so it's more about are guys ready and in position vs can my guy beat your guy head up.


Then no more disguising blitzes, defenses can't move pre snap and no subbing until a first down is made, if it's just my guys against yours for 4 downs.

If you prepare your defense well enough, they can get ready.
Posted by geauxnavybeatbama
Member since Jul 2013
25134 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:55 pm to
LSU's conditioning for the HUNH in the 2011 Oregon game actually helped them have such a dominant defense that season. They adjusted for it and shut it down. So I'm all for teams running that style of offense because it'll only force the defense to get better.
Posted by LSU1NSEC
Member since Sep 2007
17243 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 7:58 pm to
fake injuries bruh
Posted by Ton Chou
On the Levee
Member since Feb 2010
757 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 8:11 pm to
He admittedly stated it was a "stunt". There!!
Posted by RockyMtnTigerWDE
War Damn Eagle Dad!
Member since Oct 2010
105376 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 8:15 pm to
OK


quote:

stunt
1.
a performance displaying a person's skill or dexterity, as in athletics;
Posted by Ton Chou
On the Levee
Member since Feb 2010
757 posts
Posted on 3/1/14 at 8:19 pm to
Yeah I think that preparation for that game should be the way it's done every year just because it makes the actual game slow down for you. For what it's worth I don't think auburn's o was gimmicky. Teams like Oregon on the other hand couldn't do better than 8-4 if they were forced to line up and play football which is why they trip up on solid teams like Stanford that play real football. That BS is just like Heisemans quote said, a "stunt" when you can't man up head to head at every position.
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