Yesterday, 02:03 PM
Curious as to thoughts on the curious defensive holding infraction -- 5 yards and an automatic first down. It's curious to me for a number of reasons. Offensive holding is 10 yards and no first down -- why the difference? An offensive hold can be just as impactful as a defensive hold -- a defensive hold may prevent a Justin Jefferson escaping a double move for a big gain; an offensive tackle pulling down a Jonathan Greenard may prevent a sack; a fumble; or hit leading to a game-changing INT. In other words, a well-timed hold may be worth way more than the infracton -- and half the time the player will likely get away with no flag. So, again, why the difference in the penalty?
At 5 yards and an automatic first down, the penalty seems both over and under penal. It's fourth and 20 and a little tug on a receiver running a 5-yard route nets an automatic first down -- doesn't seem appropriate. By the same token, giving a bear hug to a receiver because you are burned on a double more should merit more than 5 yards, and, in certain circumstances, the automatic first down element is essentially meaningless.
The thought comes to mind because I am seeing more and more teams using defensive holding as a tactic to prevent comebacks. Detroit was doing it in spades, and I saw other teams doing it as well. If you grab a receiver and it costs your team 5 yards, it will take the offensive team forever to get down the field in situations where trading 5 yards and some time off the clock is worth a whole lot more than potentially giving up a chunk play.
All things considered, I like the idea of a 10-yard penalty and no automatic first down for defensive holding. It straddles the line between too much and too little.
At 5 yards and an automatic first down, the penalty seems both over and under penal. It's fourth and 20 and a little tug on a receiver running a 5-yard route nets an automatic first down -- doesn't seem appropriate. By the same token, giving a bear hug to a receiver because you are burned on a double more should merit more than 5 yards, and, in certain circumstances, the automatic first down element is essentially meaningless.
The thought comes to mind because I am seeing more and more teams using defensive holding as a tactic to prevent comebacks. Detroit was doing it in spades, and I saw other teams doing it as well. If you grab a receiver and it costs your team 5 yards, it will take the offensive team forever to get down the field in situations where trading 5 yards and some time off the clock is worth a whole lot more than potentially giving up a chunk play.
All things considered, I like the idea of a 10-yard penalty and no automatic first down for defensive holding. It straddles the line between too much and too little.