I find it amusing when you suddenly forget what English words mean when convenient to making an ad-hominem attack. There is certainly no trickery involved. You can say a major penalty that results in a point has a more significant impact. Or you could say that a major penalty that doesn't result in a point awarded has a less significant impact. It's the same thing. I was just correcting your error in implying that having a penalty that was more significant was not OK, but having one that was less significant would be OK. It's both or none.3-- Nice effort to use that 'or less' in there and then try to rationalize your whole argument off that one tiny bit of prestidigitation but that still leaves you trying to explain why only a Major penalty--still assigned at the official's discretion--gets some extra oomph within the 90 second window and a Minor doesn't as plainly the full effect of the Minor is also "diminished" if your rationale is to be accepted.
A rule should provide for the same penalty for the same infraction. The 90-second rule helps compensate for the fact that a major infraction committed with less than 5 minutes on the clock DOES NOT have the same penalty as a major infraction committed with 5 or more minutes on the clock. And the penalty for a major infraction with less than 90 seconds on the clock is SO MUCH LESS than the penalty would be were that infraction committed with a full 5 minutes of game time remaining that just awarding the point is a proper action to at least bring some balance.4--even with you're qualification you're still dancing. A rule shouldn't have more or less impact --except when it should have more impact so that it doesn't have less. That may work in Wisconsin ...
It's a great position to evaluate rules from. If the penalty for breaking the rule is less than the benefit of breaking the rule, then you don't have a rule, because following the rule is stupid.There is also a world of difference in imagining there are "benefits" from breaking rules and getting caught and suggesting there is an inequality of punishment. I don't buy either one but your continued suggestion that the issue is a team or player benefiting from breaking the rules when caught doing so goes a long way to explaining your p.o.v. It is also, IMO, a poor position to evaluate and make rules from.
I'm sorry, are are you using <FONT=#FFFFF> around those arguments? Because I don't see 'em....No, that is one reason you made up for why you think the 90 second rule is a good one. Same with your other reasons. The fact is, regardless of the rationales, the rule is problematic when considering what the "rules" are and should be as you have amply demonstrated in attempting to dance around the parts of my argument you can't actually answer.
I don't have the NXL rules handy, but at least two of those are extreme gun penalties (velocity/ROF), and are under the control of the player. That's 4 of 6 right there. And yes, I'm prepared to award a point in those cases, because, again, if a major penalty is going to be a major penalty, then you NEED to award the point when there's less than 90 seconds left if it's going to be in any way equitable to a major penalty received with 5 or more minutes of game time.6--this one is pure desperation and is almost totally divorced from the reality of actually playing the game. Though it did make me smile.
Btw, 4 of the 6 Major penalty definitions listed in the rulebook have nothing to do with any sort of playing on. Are you still prepared to award a point in the last 90 seconds for any Major?
I disagree, especially before the 90 second rule was implemented. Some NXL coaches are still figuring out they need to throw the towel before the 5-minute warning to get any extra game time.7--I feel pretty confident saying I deal with reasonably smart teams all the time and I also happen to have actual experience both with and without the rule in place. So on that score I know what I'm advocating. But I do appreciate your concern.