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Date: | Tue, 16 May 2006 17:34:52 -0400 |
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Yeah, but isn't kissing your sister illegal in some states?
________
Edward N. Moller
Controller and Assistant Treasurer
Mount Ida College
777 Dedham Street
Newton, MA 02459-3323
Tel 617-928-4515
Fax 617-928-4581
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Mount Ida College provides a diverse community of learners a challenging
education that blends the liberal arts with professional preparation.
We dedicate our energy, imagination, and resources to empowering all
students to achieve academically and contribute responsibly in a
changing world.
-----Original Message-----
From: - Hockey-L - The College Hockey Discussion List
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of J. Michael Neal
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2006 4:53 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: overtime
John T Whelan wrote:
> I disagree completely. 4x4 overtime is a stupid gimmick; the rules
> should be the same in overtime as they are in regulation. Note that
> in the games that people actually care about, the playoffs, the NHL
> uses the real 5x5 overtime (and no TV timeouts, but that's another axe
> to grind). At least Whitehead didn't propose giving a consolation
> point for losing in overtime, or a wretched shootout. If you really
> need to change the rules to reduce the number of ties, change to a
> single 20-minute sudden-death overtime period and stay faithful to the
> structure of the game.
>
> I also disagree that college should try to track the NHL in every one
> of their desperate attempts to attract more basketball fans. In
> almost every respect, I find the NCAA rules superior to the NHL ones.
I start with questioning why ties are something that need to be avoided
so fanatically. If you have a tie after 5 minutes of OT, it means that
the two teams played pretty much as well as each other. Why slice
things more and more narrowly in order to determine which team gets two
points and the other none? Giving them each one point accurately
describes what happened; the two teams played equally well.
Of course, what do I know; I like cricket, where playing for the draw is
a common and perfectly acceptable tactic.
--
J. Michael Neal
http://idonotlikeyoueither.blogspot.com/
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