Carson Palmer: that hit wasn't outlawed until Brady got hit like that Deacon Jones: no head slap while pass rushing Neil Smith: neutral zone infraction
Your wrong about about Carson Palmer. Its was his ACL tear in 2006 that got the rule changed. After Brady's injury they added to the rule you can't lunge at a QB knees while on the ground.
Yeah, Carson Palmer May had been taken out, but the rule did not become official until Brady got taken out by KC chiefs CB Barnard Pollard during their game that year. Brady went down with a season ending injury and whenever he had came back the following season that was when the rule became official. So Carson May had been the first but had the NFL golden boy had not of gotten injured in that game against the chiefs it wouldn’t had been passed so quickly.
@@EphPhaThaINC That's the way I remembered it. As a Bills fan, I did notice how Brady's star power helped make that rule "necessary". Kinda like T.O. and the horsecollar rule.
@@slimdougmaddox4634 yep, and I also remember that the very next year Tom Brady, whenever he had been cleared to come back and the very next week, my KC Chiefs had just released Brandon Bayless, the very guy that took Brady out, and Bayless pretty much quietly retired shortly after that. Coincidence? I think not. Bayless got black balled hard.
As a Rams fan I feel for Raiders fans more than those of any other franchise, I really do. Rams followers have been subject to surprisingly similar pain over the years
Once upon a time, Lane's favorite technique was referred to as a "clothesline tackle." After the tackle part of it was banned (in 1962 I think), the clothesline was still employed well into the 1970s. While stopping the forward progress of an offensive player with a fully extended arm across the upper chest can be called as a personal foul, the clothesline technique is not specifically prohibited by league rules. Today's players know better than to use it in a game, and football is better for its elimination.
Carson Palmer: that hit wasn't outlawed until Brady got hit like that Deacon Jones: no head slap while pass rushing Neil Smith: neutral zone infraction
Great video but Carson Palmer wasnt the rule implementation to me, they didnt gaf about the Bengals, who could had made the super bowl that year i feel. I think that 2008 season opener hit on Brady by Barnard Pollard was the one that the NFL said no more. They hadnt gaf until Brady got knocked out and they quickly hopped off the saddle on his balls and did something about it.
Exactly.. your telling me that In a game where holding and horse collar tackles exist, your allowed to pull someone down by their hair? I feel if the hair lays above the jersey numbers, you can’t grab it, as it is too close to what would be considered horse collar.
@@charlieterrell8501 some hair is not the same length so how can a defender make a split second decision on how long the offenders hair is if he can pull it as they get in reach to tackle? Obviously if the hair is too long and you can’t pull it then that’s no fair but how is a defender supposed to know if his hair is just long enough or short enough? I think the rule is right and the players who grow their hair out are only risking themself
Good lord man, you got literally NONE of the Carson Palmer / Bengals things even close to right. It was an AFC Wild Card game, Palmer hit Chris Henry with the pass and it was NOT a Touchdown but a deep pass.....
Even in the clip you can clearly see it's #15 Henry not #85 Johnson. Got a double twitch from all the wrong statements, and then just seeing that season end all over again.
@@TryPuttingItInRice nah not really. Game was played different back in those days. Try to fuck with the ravens from 2002-2008. They’d glock tf outta ya
So you attribute consistent success to being a "dirty team"... as if they haven't earned 6 super bowl titles and been in the playoffs consistently for most of their existence? 😂
Close line tackle, the face mask tackle, the hit on defenseless receiver, John the Hammer Williamson cracking helmets with blows to the head, ruffing the punter, assisting a player to block a kick...
Kimo didn't hit Palmer below the knee...he rolled into him, totally by accident. Kimo was in no way, shape or form a dirty player, & sources say he was assuaged with guilt after the play.
@@jessicasharp9886 ok um, WHICH GAME did u watch again? Not to mention that a roll over call can overcome jus ' bout it. No pressure though we have a state left for NYC at 2-3rec.
No mention of the other major change made at the same time as the 5-yard chuck rule: Allowing offensive linemen to extend their arms and use their hands when in contact with a defensive player. Prior to the change, O-linemen had to keep their arms bent at the elbows and their hands close to their chest. As a result of this allowance, average team passing yardage per game increased to 158.8 in 1978, up from 141.9 the previous season. Not a huge leap, but by 1981 that figure exceeded 200 ypg (204.4) for the first time in league history. For perspective, the 2020 average was 240.2 ypg. Those two rule alterations created the NFL as we know it today.
This should help you understand it’s less about sports competition and more about entertainment. Big passing games are more entertaining. The NFL is a product.
@@CableReadyTechnoSIut Sports as entertainment has been obvious for decades. From the time I started watching the NFL in 1966, I've seen it develop from largely a sport for fans in cities with their own teams to a nationwide phenomenon. My move from football-crazed Texas to Washington state five years ago has revealed it is not a uniformly represented across the country. The connection with the Seahawks was big when our family arrived and they were contenders. Since the Hawks have been in the doldrums, even at 12-4 in 2020, their paraphernalia is less noticeable. But the grocery stores put up big soft drink displays a couple of weeks before the Super Bowl. In short, passing has made the game more popular. A business not growing is a business dying. Chalk that up to the investor culture and the runaway demands of capitalism, two aspects l have tried to profit from in a love-hate relationship.
I think in regard to the Holy Roller, the rule about the ball not being able to advanced by someone besides the fumbler is only true in the last two minutes of the half. Also, the tuck rule was that after a pump fake if the QB wanted to tuck the ball and run, then he has to be allowed to bring the ball all the way into his body into a "tuck" position. In the Raiders game, it was ruled Brady had finished pumping but was still in the motion of tucking it away. Brady's arm wasn't actually moving forward, which is always ruled a pass and not a fumble. If it were moving forward, there's no controversy.
Editing point of note at 3:00, Palmer didn’t lead the Bengals to a first-round bye. They won the division in 2005, but the game he had his knee decimated was the wild-card game vs. the Steelers, not the divisional. Great video though!
Considering all of the players safety rule you’d really think the NFL wouldn’t allow hailing pulling as hair is an extension of the uniform. You think they’d make it unnecessary roughness or something.
0:29 Roy Williams 1:29 Mel Blount 2:28 Carson Palmer 3:33 Phil Dawson 4:50 Ricky Williams 5:44 Hines Ward 6:41 Bronco Nagurski 7:31 Lester Hayes 8:17 Ken Stabler 9:09 Tom Brady
The main rule that needs to be changed is the touchdown game winner in overtime. The other team needs to have a chance to score a td to tie the game in overtime
@@alexj.5207 more of they don't want players to get tired. They had a college game last year to go on for almost 7 overtime. They changed it to where after 5th overtime they could only do 2-point conversions
Overtime rule definitely needs to change. But if the NFL doesn't want the teams to go to 7 overtimes then just let that one overtime quarter be it and if it ends in a tie then its a tie game. But both teams should have a chance to have the ball on offense. The only time it shouldn't is if that first possession it ends in a safety. That should be the only way it should end in one position.
My least two favorite calls were the N'keal Harry out of bounds at the three yard line against the Chiefs during the Patriots week 14 loss in 2019 and the Patrick Mahomes call where the refs said he threw an incomplete pass but it was clearly a fumble and or interception in the Patriots week 4 loss to the Chiefs this season
I thought the rule was if a QB starts the passing motion and loses control of the ball before he brings it back into control, it's an incomplete pass. Brady was not moving the ball forward but bringing it back into his control. So gut feeling says it should be a fumble. Spirit of the law says fumble. Bad rule.
@@jordandenny89 Laughable. It was in the rule-book. And it took them 11 years to write it out of the rule-book. Also, NE had lost a game to Jets due a Tuck-rule that same season.
The ball crossing the end zone on a kickoff makes it a touch back unless caught is a dumb rule. How about Warren Sapp making the unnessary roughness from his 2003 block on a packers player ending his season?
they need to do something, anything they can about the roughing the passer and taunting penalties that are happening this season, like I once saw that a qb had literally let go of the ball maybe a quarter of a second earlier, and they called a roughing the passer
I hate the defenseless receiver rule. There is no such thing as a defenseless receiver. If he lays out to catch it then knock his ass out. Its the quarterback's job to put the ball in a position where his receivers won't get knocked out. The other rule I hate is the onside kick. No player from either team should touch the ball until it goes 10 yards.
As a Ravens fan all I have to say about the Tuck Rule is that people need to get over it honestly you know why? Because not only had that call been used earlier that season when the Patriots played the Jets when Vinny Testaverde had gotten the same call but it had also been used since 1999 almost two years before that Patriots vs Raiders playoff game was in existence. That's not the only thing either. During that game after the officials had made that call the Raiders had opportunities to put that game away in their favor. They could have blocked Adam Vinatieri's field goal, and they could have stopped the Patriots offense in overtime the Raiders defense had them on 4th down and still didn't get a stop in OT the Raiders had their chances and they didn't seal the game. So you tell me who's really to blame here? The officials or the Raiders ineptitude?
Good video. As for the tuck rule, Brady was by no means responsible for any kind of change in that rule. He - or rather then refs - was only responsible for one thing: making it from an obscure rule only those really well versed in the NFL rulebook knew to one everyone was familiar with. The rule wasn't made because of him, wasn't modified because of him and wasn't abolished because of him.
Made or modified I agree, but because that play brought it into such prominence, and because at that time it was pretty easy to hate the pats and Brady, I think it's fair to say he had some role in the rule getting removed.
@@stevencowan37 Well, there is definitely merit in this reasoning - but then it was a devilishly slow burn, as the infamous Tuck Rule Game was in 2001 and the rule was only removed from the NFL rule book in 2013.
As someone with dreadlocks. It is painful being ripped down from your hair. And your head starts to hurt afterwards from being jerked back so fast. They need to change this before someone gets hurt or their hair gets ripped out.
I wish for you make a video, when TB12 was just lucky to win. Whatever. Game, season or the Big Game. As with the tuck rule in this video. With your voice impression, it could be great. Thx
it was a wild card game, they didn't have a bye. Carson was back at the beginning of the next season also he didn't miss a full season. Also if my remember right it was the Brady hit not the Palmer hit that changed the rule because Kimo tripped into Carson
The fumble rule annoys me to no end. Any player should be able to recover a fumble at any time. This shouldn’t be difficult to figure out, “fumbling” the ball forward on purpose should be considered an illegal forward pass and should be considered/penalized as such.
Any player on offense can recover the fumble at any time, its just that only the person that initally fumbled the ball can recover the fumble and continue moving the ball downfield.
How about the Immaculate Reception where Franco Harris picked the ball out of the air after Jack Tatum hit John "Frenchy" Fugua trying to catch Terry Bradshaw's desperation pass. The rule back then was that a pass couldn't be caught by another offensive player without first being contacted by a defensive player. It was ruled (controversially) that the ball did contact Tatum making Harris' reception legal. Harris took it in for the game winning touchdown. The rule has been changed so that, now, an offensive player can catch a pass without an intervening defensive player touching it.
Good video. The rule that I don't understand is the "offensive pass interference". I do not know how a member of a team can be penalized for interfering with a pass to one of his own teammates!! Can someone please explain how this works!
I believe you have something mixed up. Offensive pass interference is when a receiver disrupts a defender's chance to get to the ball solely for the purpose of interfering. (intentionally grabbing their arm/jersey/etc., or pushing the defender away to get a better chance to catch the ball themselves or just make sure the defender doesn't catch it). I believe what you're trying to get at is when a receiver hits one of his own teammates' defenders so that his teammate can get open to receive a pass. It's a common thing to do in the NFL, but it can only be done within 5 yards, anything past that 5 yards beyond the line of scrimmage will result in an illegal block downfield(which is what your example seems to be), or offensive pass interference. Hope this cleared up your confusion :)
The explanation of the tuck rule is not complete. The rule stated that if the QB moved the ball backwards in order to tuck the ball (in prevision of a hit, for example) AFTER the ball had moved forward then if the ball comes out, it is still an incomplete pass.
The advancing a fumble rule only applies on 4th down or within the two minute warning. Pretty silly not to mention such an important detail.
Pretty silly how you get no bitches
Y’all will be alright
Make ur own video than
Carson Palmer: that hit wasn't outlawed until Brady got hit like that
Deacon Jones: no head slap while pass rushing
Neil Smith: neutral zone infraction
Your wrong about about Carson Palmer. Its was his ACL tear in 2006 that got the rule changed.
After Brady's injury they added to the rule you can't lunge at a QB knees while on the ground.
@@poiziegaming9055 okay thats the rule im thinking about. Both plays basically happened the same way. Hitting the QB below the knees.
Yeah, Carson Palmer May had been taken out, but the rule did not become official until Brady got taken out by KC chiefs CB Barnard Pollard during their game that year. Brady went down with a season ending injury and whenever he had came back the following season that was when the rule became official.
So Carson May had been the first but had the NFL golden boy had not of gotten injured in that game against the chiefs it wouldn’t had been passed so quickly.
@@EphPhaThaINC That's the way I remembered it. As a Bills fan, I did notice how Brady's star power helped make that rule "necessary". Kinda like T.O. and the horsecollar rule.
@@slimdougmaddox4634 yep, and I also remember that the very next year Tom Brady, whenever he had been cleared to come back and the very next week, my KC Chiefs had just released Brandon Bayless, the very guy that took Brady out, and Bayless pretty much quietly retired shortly after that. Coincidence? I think not. Bayless got black balled hard.
"Tom Brady, Tuck rule"
Every Raiders fan: Time to watch something else
As a Rams fan I feel for Raiders fans more than those of any other franchise, I really do. Rams followers have been subject to surprisingly similar pain over the years
@@keanuismyfather7477 u feel for them more than us lion fans 😓😢
@@crackedi yeah lol at this point the Lions are caged circus animals for endless sadistic entertainment 😝
i hear ya[as a raider fan]
Just to keep him the Bane of Raiders existence he had to join the Bucs, 😂
Uh night train lane having multiple tackle rules adjusted because of him
Lemme just rko this guy real quick. Madden gonna wanna see that so they buff my hit power rating in 2020
Yeah he literally made the face mask a thing
First thing I thought of too
Yep. That and Deacon Jones' headslap.
Once upon a time, Lane's favorite technique was referred to as a "clothesline tackle." After the tackle part of it was banned (in 1962 I think), the clothesline was still employed well into the 1970s. While stopping the forward progress of an offensive player with a fully extended arm across the upper chest can be called as a personal foul, the clothesline technique is not specifically prohibited by league rules. Today's players know better than to use it in a game, and football is better for its elimination.
Cough cough, Night Train Lane, cough cough, literally the man who was a face mask call
Carson Palmer: that hit wasn't outlawed until Brady got hit like that
Deacon Jones: no head slap while pass rushing
Neil Smith: neutral zone infraction
Btw I like this narrator dude who’s talking is this video!
Great video but Carson Palmer wasnt the rule implementation to me, they didnt gaf about the Bengals, who could had made the super bowl that year i feel. I think that 2008 season opener hit on Brady by Barnard Pollard was the one that the NFL said no more. They hadnt gaf until Brady got knocked out and they quickly hopped off the saddle on his balls and did something about it.
Pat mcafee and the colts onside kicking, changed how you're allowed to set up for kickoffs
The hair tackle looks no different then Horse collar
Exactly.. your telling me that In a game where holding and horse collar tackles exist, your allowed to pull someone down by their hair? I feel if the hair lays above the jersey numbers, you can’t grab it, as it is too close to what would be considered horse collar.
@@charlieterrell8501 some hair is not the same length so how can a defender make a split second decision on how long the offenders hair is if he can pull it as they get in reach to tackle? Obviously if the hair is too long and you can’t pull it then that’s no fair but how is a defender supposed to know if his hair is just long enough or short enough? I think the rule is right and the players who grow their hair out are only risking themself
@@christiangarza449 fuck no that rule is fucking dumb bro
@@_sheluvschristian2838 it's not
@@exarkun3080 yes the hell it is
Hey man voice got deeper 😂
It’s a Different person
Sounds like an episode of American gangster 😂🤣😅
@@CallMeLeonz hahaha
That means his balls dropped 😂😂
@@frankiewilliams8995 lol
I'm in support of any rules changes that undo the NFL's recent stance on defensive players shouldn't be able to play defense.
@@Therythman if you’re asking this in 2022 you should question yourself
This dude sounds like he should narrate the first 48 or a crime show
So true
Yeah I think he missed night train lane
Sounds like the dude from Gangland
Actually this guy sounds like he can be the star in the next Batman movie
You nailed it
Btw I like this narrator dude who’s talking is this video!
He sounds like the same dude for I think it is TPS sports not sure
Good lord man, you got literally NONE of the Carson Palmer / Bengals things even close to right. It was an AFC Wild Card game, Palmer hit Chris Henry with the pass and it was NOT a Touchdown but a deep pass.....
Even in the clip you can clearly see it's #15 Henry not #85 Johnson. Got a double twitch from all the wrong statements, and then just seeing that season end all over again.
The Steelers are the main reasons we have these rules and the rest of there division
Yeah bro we don’t fuck around
@@thedailygrind444 dirty ass team
@@TryPuttingItInRice nah not really. Game was played different back in those days. Try to fuck with the ravens from 2002-2008. They’d glock tf outta ya
@@thedailygrind444 nah steelers are a bunch of dirty players, even tomlin is dirty getting in the way of plays a lot on the side line
So you attribute consistent success to being a "dirty team"... as if they haven't earned 6 super bowl titles and been in the playoffs consistently for most of their existence? 😂
how could forget the Hester rule moving the kickoff to the 35 yard line increasing touchbacks
Close line tackle, the face mask tackle, the hit on defenseless receiver, John the Hammer Williamson cracking helmets with blows to the head, ruffing the punter, assisting a player to block a kick...
Erik Williams hands to the face rule and Michael Irvin push off rule loved the video
Yo nonstop is me again i want to ask you if you could make video of the highest paid nfl players this season.
Last time i was this early the browns where 16-0.
So you're not early
Dang you’ve never been early
You can't say last time if it didn't happen. Browns were never 16 and 0 which means you can't say last time as there wasent a last time
@@vb3710 r/woooooooooossshhhhh
@@vb3710 yeah, no shit sherlock. he’s joking about how he has never been early like the browns have never been 16-0 jackass
Jumping over the linemen to block a punt/field goal: Jamie Collins/Donta Hitower
You should be able to do that
Still aloud and polamolu did it too
You are allowed to do it but you can’t hit the long snapper while doing it
Do they have a booth review in soccer yet?
The tuck rule was actually the Jets earlier that season. The Patriots led by Bledsoe lost to them earlier in the year because of a similar incident.
Really?? I had NEVER heard of the tuck rule until the Raiders v Patriots.
When people talk about the tuck rule, everyone references Brady vs the Raiders. It's has nothing to do with anything else.
@@highmedic2351and that’s biased
@@jmanfunkslice How so?
Kimo didn't hit Palmer below the knee...he rolled into him, totally by accident. Kimo was in no way, shape or form a dirty player, & sources say he was assuaged with guilt after the play.
Bullshit
@@jessicasharp9886 ok um, WHICH GAME did u watch again? Not to mention that a roll over call can overcome jus ' bout it. No pressure though we have a state left for NYC at 2-3rec.
@@jessicasharp9886 jessica chill out, you can clearly see in the video it was not intentional
All Steelers are dirty players
No mention of the other major change made at the same time as the 5-yard chuck rule: Allowing offensive linemen to extend their arms and use their hands when in contact with a defensive player. Prior to the change, O-linemen had to keep their arms bent at the elbows and their hands close to their chest. As a result of this allowance, average team passing yardage per game increased to 158.8 in 1978, up from 141.9 the previous season. Not a huge leap, but by 1981 that figure exceeded 200 ypg (204.4) for the first time in league history. For perspective, the 2020 average was 240.2 ypg. Those two rule alterations created the NFL as we know it today.
This should help you understand it’s less about sports competition and more about entertainment. Big passing games are more entertaining. The NFL is a product.
@@CableReadyTechnoSIut Sports as entertainment has been obvious for decades. From the time I started watching the NFL in 1966, I've seen it develop from largely a sport for fans in cities with their own teams to a nationwide phenomenon. My move from football-crazed Texas to Washington state five years ago has revealed it is not a uniformly represented across the country. The connection with the Seahawks was big when our family arrived and they were contenders. Since the Hawks have been in the doldrums, even at 12-4 in 2020, their paraphernalia is less noticeable. But the grocery stores put up big soft drink displays a couple of weeks before the Super Bowl.
In short, passing has made the game more popular. A business not growing is a business dying. Chalk that up to the investor culture and the runaway demands of capitalism, two aspects l have tried to profit from in a love-hate relationship.
@@CableReadyTechnoSIut The Chuck rule was fucking stupid. Should never have been a thing.
I think in regard to the Holy Roller, the rule about the ball not being able to advanced by someone besides the fumbler is only true in the last two minutes of the half.
Also, the tuck rule was that after a pump fake if the QB wanted to tuck the ball and run, then he has to be allowed to bring the ball all the way into his body into a "tuck" position. In the Raiders game, it was ruled Brady had finished pumping but was still in the motion of tucking it away. Brady's arm wasn't actually moving forward, which is always ruled a pass and not a fumble. If it were moving forward, there's no controversy.
Um Carson Palmer got Hurt in the wild card game against the steelers on the second play of the game after a deep shot to Chris Henry.
5:47 why did you use a picture of the NBA draft?😂
5:46 - "In the 2008 NFL draft". While a clip from the NBA draft plays in the back lol
ikr lmfaoo
Editing point of note at 3:00, Palmer didn’t lead the Bengals to a first-round bye. They won the division in 2005, but the game he had his knee decimated was the wild-card game vs. the Steelers, not the divisional. Great video though!
Also he didn't throw a TD to Chad Johnson, it was a 66 yard Catch to RIP Chris Henry who also hurt his knee on the same play...
It was indeed the wild card game
Boy do you have a deep voice 😂😂😂
This is my first time watching this guy I don’t get it
Hard to argue the Tuck Rule wasn’t the beginning of a major slump for the Raiders.
after hair change rule i saw nba draft..😂
That hair rule must be the stupidest rule ever. It's basically a horse collar tackle, and the risk of severe neck injury is huge.
If you’re out here pulling a man’s hair to tackle him to the ground, you’re sus as it gets 😂🤣😂
Considering all of the players safety rule you’d really think the NFL wouldn’t allow hailing pulling as hair is an extension of the uniform. You think they’d make it unnecessary roughness or something.
0:29 Roy Williams
1:29 Mel Blount
2:28 Carson Palmer
3:33 Phil Dawson
4:50 Ricky Williams
5:44 Hines Ward
6:41 Bronco Nagurski
7:31 Lester Hayes
8:17 Ken Stabler
9:09 Tom Brady
Tonight this was JxmyHighroller for a second
Same
The 2005 Bengals did not have a 1st round bye they were the #3 seed and had to play in the wildcard round where palmer got hurt
The main rule that needs to be changed is the touchdown game winner in overtime. The other team needs to have a chance to score a td to tie the game in overtime
Yeah overtime rules in the NFL are so dumb. at least a field goal can't automatically win it anymore. That was super dumb
Probably dont, want the game to air for too long
@@alexj.5207 more of they don't want players to get tired. They had a college game last year to go on for almost 7 overtime. They changed it to where after 5th overtime they could only do 2-point conversions
@@alexj.5207 why not, more air time, more Comercials, more $$$
Overtime rule definitely needs to change. But if the NFL doesn't want the teams to go to 7 overtimes then just let that one overtime quarter be it and if it ends in a tie then its a tie game. But both teams should have a chance to have the ball on offense. The only time it shouldn't is if that first possession it ends in a safety. That should be the only way it should end in one position.
My least two favorite calls were the N'keal Harry out of bounds at the three yard line against the Chiefs during the Patriots week 14 loss in 2019 and the Patrick Mahomes call where the refs said he threw an incomplete pass but it was clearly a fumble and or interception in the Patriots week 4 loss to the Chiefs this season
I spotted the Patriots fan!
@@josephperales1848 OU
That last rule wasnt removed it was altered so that the ball must have left the hand of the passer for it to be an incomplete pass
Roy Williams was an excellent player and that penalty changed his career because he was slow.
Ricky Williams in Miami was awesome too.
I always thought brady did the tuck rule intentionally i didn't know the refs were the ones that called it
Yea everyone blames Brady for stuff without actually looking into it.
5:49 mans really put the nba draft in there
6:32 why is the scoreboard blurred out?
That was the NBA draft you used hahaha @5:48
Intentionally dragging a ball carrier from behind and swinging entire body weight across the legs Burfect vs Bell
Perfect example
As a Raider fan, I’ll never get over that tuck rule. Ever.
I thought the rule was if a QB starts the passing motion and loses control of the ball before he brings it back into control, it's an incomplete pass. Brady was not moving the ball forward but bringing it back into his control. So gut feeling says it should be a fumble. Spirit of the law says fumble. Bad rule.
It's, it was and is b.s. that's why the pats have what they have. Once a cheater, always a cheater.
@@jordandenny89 Laughable. It was in the rule-book. And it took them 11 years to write it out of the rule-book.
Also, NE had lost a game to Jets due a Tuck-rule that same season.
yea it’s bs. the patriots dynasty would’ve never happened, and the raiders would’ve never gone into misery for 20 years
@@sikecar534 11 years is about how long it took them to dig through the rule book to make sure there was a rule that could get Brady the win.
Richard "Night Train" Lane and tackling by the face-mask, when the league first got them.
This man pulled my weave off 😂😂
The ball crossing the end zone on a kickoff makes it a touch back unless caught is a dumb rule.
How about Warren Sapp making the unnessary roughness from his 2003 block on a packers player ending his season?
Why at the last word of his sentence his voice gets deeper
yo i can’t unhear that shit now😭
Roy Williams, and Rodney Harrison TYVM.
That tuck rule is still active, I was at the Bucs and dolphins game this October and the same thing happened and they called it a incomplete pass
You should do an other video with night train lane he changed rules
5:48 bro he said 2008 nfl draft and it showed the 2008 nba draft
Good catch! 😂😂
the Alzado rule. A player cannot use his helmet as a weapon hahahaha
First person I thought about when I saw the title 😂😂
they need to do something, anything they can about the roughing the passer and taunting penalties that are happening this season, like I once saw that a qb had literally let go of the ball maybe a quarter of a second earlier, and they called a roughing the passer
I hate the defenseless receiver rule. There is no such thing as a defenseless receiver. If he lays out to catch it then knock his ass out. Its the quarterback's job to put the ball in a position where his receivers won't get knocked out. The other rule I hate is the onside kick. No player from either team should touch the ball until it goes 10 yards.
Hair is an extension of the uniform, yet the shoulder pads are not.
Horse collar tackle is pretty much the same thing as pulling hair.
Also this mans cadence is the shining example of why I listen to RUclips videos at 1.5x-2x speed minimum lmaoooo
Is it just me or is Tom Brady the only one that the tuck rule gets called on... uuuuhhhhh... yeah
He knew it was a fumble. We all knew it was a fumble.
The jets used it before patriots did
As a Ravens fan all I have to say about the Tuck Rule is that people need to get over it honestly you know why? Because not only had that call been used earlier that season when the Patriots played the Jets when Vinny Testaverde had gotten the same call but it had also been used since 1999 almost two years before that Patriots vs Raiders playoff game was in existence.
That's not the only thing either. During that game after the officials had made that call the Raiders had opportunities to put that game away in their favor. They could have blocked Adam Vinatieri's field goal, and they could have stopped the Patriots offense in overtime the Raiders defense had them on 4th down and still didn't get a stop in OT
the Raiders had their chances and they didn't seal the game. So you tell me who's really to blame here? The officials or the Raiders ineptitude?
@@ravens52raylewis87 Thank you so much.
A simple 30 second google search would tell you it's happened before and after it was called on Brady.
Good video.
As for the tuck rule, Brady was by no means responsible for any kind of change in that rule. He - or rather then refs - was only responsible for one thing: making it from an obscure rule only those really well versed in the NFL rulebook knew to one everyone was familiar with. The rule wasn't made because of him, wasn't modified because of him and wasn't abolished because of him.
Made or modified I agree, but because that play brought it into such prominence, and because at that time it was pretty easy to hate the pats and Brady, I think it's fair to say he had some role in the rule getting removed.
@@stevencowan37 Well, there is definitely merit in this reasoning - but then it was a devilishly slow burn, as the infamous Tuck Rule Game was in 2001 and the rule was only removed from the NFL rule book in 2013.
5:48 For Heinz ward for the draft it showed the nba draft instead of nfl draft
I think the OT rules should eliminate the sudden death clause. Would rather see a full extra quarter of play.
You forgot how the NFL redefined what a catch is after the dez Bryant no catch in the playoff between the cowboys and the packers
Blind side blocking remained in placed until the last few years of Ward’s career. Ward was known as the cheap shot artist.
Man I didn’t even know who Rickey Williams was 😂😂
I knew the Tuck Rule was in here. Nothing with Tom Brady in it will go pass anyone.
Wb moving the extra point back I think that makes it better lol like that bengals packers game ain’t no making field goals or extra points
As someone with dreadlocks. It is painful being ripped down from your hair. And your head starts to hurt afterwards from being jerked back so fast. They need to change this before someone gets hurt or their hair gets ripped out.
Soooooo, you can snatch the SHIT out of their HAIR.....But you better not grab their COLLAR?
I dont know why i saw the thumbnail and title and thought "dont murder" was gonna be a rule on this list😂
Was that the Hernandez rule? lol
I wish for you make a video, when TB12 was just lucky to win. Whatever. Game, season or the Big Game. As with the tuck rule in this video. With your voice impression, it could be great. Thx
How hard is to do research. Palmer didn’t throw a 5 yard TD on the play. You can see in the video he was throwing closer to his 5 yard line.
It was a sixty yard pass to cris Henry
Who cares he probably just made a mistake
@@brendonbernstein9660 well, when you put video evidence in your own video that proves you wrong. Kind of a big deal and a big blunder.
it was a wild card game, they didn't have a bye. Carson was back at the beginning of the next season also he didn't miss a full season. Also if my remember right it was the Brady hit not the Palmer hit that changed the rule because Kimo tripped into Carson
The fumble rule annoys me to no end. Any player should be able to recover a fumble at any time. This shouldn’t be difficult to figure out, “fumbling” the ball forward on purpose should be considered an illegal forward pass and should be considered/penalized as such.
Any player on offense can recover the fumble at any time, its just that only the person that initally fumbled the ball can recover the fumble and continue moving the ball downfield.
5:49 is the NBA draft the NFL
😂😂😂😂
i know, i was looking in the comments for that xD
He even sounds like he's 25 years old or something
That’s the voice from gangland 😂
How can the NFL allow tackling by the hair but no horse collaring? Lol
Mike Renfro’s catch that was deemed incomplete is the main reason replay exists at all.
I hear a Forensic Files narrator in the making...😂
How about the Immaculate Reception where Franco Harris picked the ball out of the air after Jack Tatum hit John "Frenchy" Fugua trying to catch Terry Bradshaw's desperation pass. The rule back then was that a pass couldn't be caught by another offensive player without first being contacted by a defensive player. It was ruled (controversially) that the ball did contact Tatum making Harris' reception legal. Harris took it in for the game winning touchdown.
The rule has been changed so that, now, an offensive player can catch a pass without an intervening defensive player touching it.
Hey Burfict took Rivers’ number
@Isoah you replied twice lol
i expected to see the Rodgers rule on here
Same
Love the Narrating
Good video. The rule that I don't understand is the "offensive pass interference". I do not know how a member of a team can be penalized for interfering with a pass to one of his own teammates!! Can someone please explain how this works!
I believe you have something mixed up. Offensive pass interference is when a receiver disrupts a defender's chance to get to the ball solely for the purpose of interfering. (intentionally grabbing their arm/jersey/etc., or pushing the defender away to get a better chance to catch the ball themselves or just make sure the defender doesn't catch it). I believe what you're trying to get at is when a receiver hits one of his own teammates' defenders so that his teammate can get open to receive a pass. It's a common thing to do in the NFL, but it can only be done within 5 yards, anything past that 5 yards beyond the line of scrimmage will result in an illegal block downfield(which is what your example seems to be), or offensive pass interference. Hope this cleared up your confusion :)
How about the Deacon Jones slapping O-lineman rule?
That's where the Gap Band's song "Oops Upside Your Head!" came from, I think!😂😂
Great video
I think that everyone who clicked on this video expected Tom Brady to be here.
The explanation of the tuck rule is not complete. The rule stated that if the QB moved the ball backwards in order to tuck the ball (in prevision of a hit, for example) AFTER the ball had moved forward then if the ball comes out, it is still an incomplete pass.
Dez caught it… “making a football move” rule. Nightmare fuel
How about Ty Law after he erased Marvin Harrison? The league enforced the no Touch after 5 yards hard.
That 5yd bump and run rule is still finicky
Raiders start at 7:42
The Bengals didn’t get a first round bye in the 2005-06 playoffs. That loss to the Steelers was in the wildcard round.
What about night train lane who made the face mask
what about the jump rule on filed goals change because of Kam Chancellor?
Ricky is the dad to every who has dreadlocks
And also I’m pretty sure this guy was the host of toonami in the early 2000’s
Tom Brady is on this, What a shocker
@Isoah you replied twice lol
Considering the tuck rule was in the league for 12 years and called multiple times afterward it would be a big stretch to say Brady was responsible.
go figure, Brady is in here and they changed a rule midgame to help him get a win. Big shocker!
@@wwbubbajoe1 The tuck rule that helped Brady was changed so that it won't happen again, it was not changed mid game to help him win tf
@@assassin_02 lol helped?? It was there for 12 years idiot the Patriots even got the same call go against the same season do research buddy.