BearsWiin;842165797 said:
It's up to the officials. And I expect they'll be looking for it going forward, and calling it if they see it.
Linemen try to get away with as much holding as possible without getting called for it. Defensive backs try to get away with as much bumping and handchecking as they can without getting called for it (OSU's aggressive DB play was a big reason Aaron Rodgers went 9 of 34 for 56 yards against the Beavers the week after Cal beat USC in 2003; Cal did something similar to UW in their victory in Seattle the year before). It's not unheard of to push the rules and challenge the referees to call you on it; in fact, it's rather common. Faking injuries is just the most recent thing, and it's a direct response to the hurry-up offense which is in itself an effort to push the rules on how fast you can get plays off.
The quickest and easiest way to eliminate fake injuries would be either:
The defense starts to jump on any slight movement by the offense (eliminating the prairie dog pop-up bullshit that offenses do)
Refs can start just start calling false starts on movement when they do the pop-up without the D having to jump.
Either would stop the faking of injuries and would not require a change of rules.
You can still run the hurry up, you just cant get the call from the sideline while set.




