For nearly as long as the internet has been around, there’s a particular rhythm for any curious person with a WiFi connection. You have a question, you Google it, you get an answer. But a mishap during this week’s Monday Night Football and the NFL’s onside kick rules has show just how unreliable Google can be these days — and how the search giant can help spread misinformation.
The confusion was sparked by an unfortunate turn of events. During the waning moments of the MNF matchup the Baltimore Ravens and Tampa Bay Buccaneers — one of two ESPN games last evening — Bucs star receiver Chris Godwin suffered a gruesome injury with his team trailing by 10 points. Fans wondered why such a star player was on the field at all at when the team was down by two scores with less than a minute remaining in the game.
“We’re just trying to win the ballgame,” Tampa head coach Todd Bowles told reporters. “We’re still down 10, trying to get extra points, kick another onside kick. It just happened.”
That quote, in part, sparked the confusion. You see, the NFL revamped its kickoff before this season and changed, well, everything, including the rules for onside kicks. Surprise onside kicks were effectively banned, for instance, because the new “dynamic” kickoff requires the kicking team to declare to the refs they’re trying an onside kick. Amid all these changes — and the NFL’s penchant for making rules complicated — it tracks that confusion might arise.
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