BigRedBuster
International Man of Mystery
Sooooo.....we out coached them.
I agree. I was thinking that play should have been reviewed.Kinda looked like the last 2 point conversion try was good for Oregon, the QB raced to the pylon and ended up hitting it, I guess they said he was already down, if he had just reached the ball out they would have had it, not like they would have won anyway, since it would've brought them to 34 points instead of 32.
I still think he got jipped a bit but I'll take it
I heard that and it pissed me off. Incredible arroganceAt the half, Helfrich said he did the first one because "some guy" wasn't paying attention. Almost condescending IMO. Glad it bit him in the a$$.
I think Oregon misses them some Chip Kelly.I saw that, but in the above situation there is a ton of risk and literally no reward for going for 2 over 1 point. You want the 5 point lead for the follow up FG to take the win in the event we scored a TD. A 6 point lead makes no difference compared to a 5 point lead in that situation. He lacks understanding of the mechanics of football scoring.Helfrich defended every 2-pt attempt saying it looked advantageous based on the situation he saw on the field.
And that is only on that specific one. Why he kept going with it after the successful conversion on the first one is mind boggling. You have the advantage, why not make us chase that extra 1 point? Instead, they gave it right back to us.
I'm glad he was on their sideline.
Like, one of Nebraska's players wasn't paying attention so they took advantage? How is that arrogant, or am I misunderstanding the situation?I heard that and it pissed me off. Incredible arroganceAt the half, Helfrich said he did the first one because "some guy" wasn't paying attention. Almost condescending IMO. Glad it bit him in the a$$.
This poses a very interesting dilemma. It has Chip Kelly overtones. On one hand you have the philosophy that you should always line up to be ready to go for maximum possible points (two) if the defense gives you the right opportunity. On the other hand is the philosophy that based on what the score situation is with the other team, and game you go for one.Helfrich defended every 2-pt attempt saying it looked advantageous based on the situation he saw on the field.
I wondered the same thing.In one article from Lincoln's or Omaha's paper he said that Oregon had a numbers advantage in the formation to go for two. It might be that MR baited them to do this.
I said the same thing to my wife^ QFT. Somewhere around switching from beer to bourbon, I commented to my wife "It's like the 2016 Huskers are playing 2015 Huskers and the Ducks are us last year"...It was refreshing to see a different team kill themselves with bad decisions, sloppy play and penalties for once. I can't remember the last time during a game that when I saw a flag I was confident it was on the opposing team.![]()
I'm not sure where either of you got your numbers but someone is way off.Today was abnormal even for Oregon. Coming into the game they had been successfull on 3 of 6 2 point conversion attempts after 13 TDs scored.
2015 they were 0 for 4 after 70 TDs scored
2014 they were 4 for 7 after 88 TDs scored
2013 they were 2 for 6 after 80 TDs scored
2012 they were 4 for 6 after 89 TDs scored
2011 they were 5 for 7 after 88 TDs scored
2010 they were 7 for 8 after 80 TDs scored
huKSer, this goes along with what we said earlier.Here's Sam's citation: