I'm surprised this topic has avoided discussion on here. For those of you who haven't heard about it, here's a link to what I'm talking about.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpC7AvXA2Rw
As the video shows, Schiano coached his Buccaneer players to crash the Giants' offensive line at the end of the game to try and get the ball back. Although there's nothing technically illegal about what they did, it's somewhat like this - just because you can do it, doesn't mean you should do it.
I see both sides to the issue. From the Giant's perspective, they were expecting the Bucs to do what most NFL teams would do - accept the kneel down. I think what Schiano did was, in fact, a cheap shot. Although a sound scheme technique, it probably wasn't the right call. And from the Buc's perspective, they're only down a score, and who knows what can happen in a few seconds. The game was all but over, but it wasn't officially over. The Giants should treat a victory formation like a regular play and not allow the defense to try and get a quick turnover.
My issues with this are two-fold - first, in most of these situations, the losing team accepts the kneel down. They don't fight the play too hard, therefore the offensive line wasn't expecting anything to happen. There could have been a serious injury. That said, when they saw the Bucs line up as they did, they should have expected what was coming next.
Second, I listened to Eric Mangini and Tim Hasslebeck talk about this earlier, and I agree with what they said - it sets a bad precedent AND makes the Bucs a target. From now, everybody is going to gun for them like they gunned for the Giants, and opposing offensive linemen are going to play a little dirtier at the end of the game because of what the Bucs have done.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jpC7AvXA2Rw
As the video shows, Schiano coached his Buccaneer players to crash the Giants' offensive line at the end of the game to try and get the ball back. Although there's nothing technically illegal about what they did, it's somewhat like this - just because you can do it, doesn't mean you should do it.
I see both sides to the issue. From the Giant's perspective, they were expecting the Bucs to do what most NFL teams would do - accept the kneel down. I think what Schiano did was, in fact, a cheap shot. Although a sound scheme technique, it probably wasn't the right call. And from the Buc's perspective, they're only down a score, and who knows what can happen in a few seconds. The game was all but over, but it wasn't officially over. The Giants should treat a victory formation like a regular play and not allow the defense to try and get a quick turnover.
My issues with this are two-fold - first, in most of these situations, the losing team accepts the kneel down. They don't fight the play too hard, therefore the offensive line wasn't expecting anything to happen. There could have been a serious injury. That said, when they saw the Bucs line up as they did, they should have expected what was coming next.
Second, I listened to Eric Mangini and Tim Hasslebeck talk about this earlier, and I agree with what they said - it sets a bad precedent AND makes the Bucs a target. From now, everybody is going to gun for them like they gunned for the Giants, and opposing offensive linemen are going to play a little dirtier at the end of the game because of what the Bucs have done.