Have they changed the amount of time again for this new season or something? I don't see what the harm in it is. Has anyone ever really taken up too much time or something?
2007-05-28 19:45:31
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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If the celebrations were a simple issue of entertainment, that would be one thing. But it goes much deeper. When one person does things to crow about his triumph over an opponent, it does several things:
1. Tells the opponent that he is a lesser being.
2. Says that respect is something reserved for the triumphant
3. Embraces the notion that being better is something to shove down the throat of another, transient though that lofty standing may be
4. Teaches the young generation desperate for a role model that these things are ok.
The last is really the whole point. This sport isn't just watched by the young adult male, but by a whole cross-section of society. This NFL thing has become so big it has the power to alter society, and because of that, has the responsibility to think Long and Hard about the effects it has. Celebrations are nothing to most of us but an irritant or entertainment, depending - but to the younger generation, they are an example of how to behave. The end result of that is portrayed by the situation in Cincinnati. It seems a leap, perhaps, to suggest this, but I believe that that's what you wind up with when you allow poor sportsmanship in the game.
2007-05-29 03:26:11
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answer #2
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answered by groesener 2
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Likes the new rules. I watch the NFL to see professional football not wanna-to-be Dancing With The Stars. Players can celebrate a score with honest excitement without going into a choreographed dance routine. There is no place in pro football for that crap.
2007-05-29 02:40:24
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answer #3
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answered by ndmagicman 7
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1 word? Sportsmanship.
need it explained more?
Look at someone like Barry Sanders. He scored a lot of touchdowns and pretty much the most he ever did was take a knee and say a prayer, or highfive a teammate.
Hiding a cell phone under the goal post pad or sticking a sharpie in your sock is going way too far. While I do agree they're getting a little too strict, drawn out celebrations like the worm or the "grenade football" are a bit much....
2007-05-29 00:55:44
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answer #4
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answered by beyondPDX 1
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Aside from the NFL's reputation of being the "No Fun League," I think the reason the league is strict on TD celebrations is that they're mostly unsportsmanlike and draw attention to the guy who's doing the deed.
Group celebrations were banned as a result of the Rams' Bob and Weave celebration in 1999. Props - such as Terrell Owens' Sharpie, Joe Horn's cell phone, and Chad Johnson's "Dear NFL Please Don't Fine Me Again" sign - are also banned.
2007-05-28 19:58:00
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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some years in the past, i in my view watched the bengals to work out Chad Johnson rejoice after a TD. Celebrations after the TD are relaxing and unique, 2 significant clarification why human beings watch soccer interior the 1st place. The NFL might have made a large type of money of of celebrations, basically like LeBron is doing together with his ritual. the reason they are growing to be to be a situation is via the fact youngsters started dancing after TD's in Pee Wee soccer. mom and dad started complaining to the league and gamers began being reported as for unsportsmanlike habit and fined.
2016-11-23 13:24:36
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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The NFL is supposedly entertainment. I am so sick of the excessive celebration call. I have never seen a celebration that took up so much time that it affected the game. Even the St Louis Rams touchdown dance normally included several players and this still did not take that much time. This rules needs to go.
2007-05-28 19:52:54
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answer #7
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answered by Jesse L 2
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It does take away from the game somewhat. You need to try and contact the NFL offices, owners, etc. I loved it when you had things like the "Fun Bunch," "The Bob N Weave" "The Icky Shuffle" etc. The biggest thing is it is one thing when you are showing true emotion, it is something else when you are taunting the other team. I think you can have celebrations without showing the other team up.
2007-05-29 02:51:12
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Yeah, it's entertainment all right..until the celebrations get so ridiculous it detracts from the sport. Grown men acting like five-year-olds after allowing a two-yard gain are really annoying.
Lest we forget that children watch these games, so the athlete should be as professional on AND OFF the field as their salary says they should be. Got that, Adam Jones? Terrell Owens? Albert Haynesworth?
The people who do not understand the restrictions do not understand discipline, nor do they understand what is right for young prospective athletes to see on the field.
I'd rather know football as a clean, hard-hitting, intense sport than a game predicated on crazy touchdown dances.
2007-05-28 22:13:21
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answer #9
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answered by Your Uncle Dodge! 7
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I started watching the NFL full-time in 1970. I watched Elmo Wright of the K.C. Chiefs do the first end- zone dance on MNF. It was cute for a while with Billy 'white shoes' Johnson and all. it was cute for a while. Nowadays though, a simple catch or a tackle warrants a big celebration - it is BS! I say okay, celebrate, but if someone comes over and clocks you for doing it - HE should be celebrated - not fined or thrown out! My daddy told me to never tell someone I was going to kick their ***. Kick their *** and THEN you can talk. wait until the game is over to celebrate. Guys nowadays are down by 21 in the 4th quarter and celebrate a fricking tackle! They should be horse-whipped, hung, and shot ( in that order).
2007-05-28 20:53:57
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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I wish that they will loosen up on some of the celebration restrictions. I enjoy seeing what Chad Johnson and others will come up with to celebrate a touchdown. The NFL is called the No Fun League for a reason.
2007-05-28 23:33:09
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answer #11
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answered by joyce 5
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