Assigning fictional wins and losses just to keep a third column out of the standings? Really? Believe me, Vikings fans felt plenty of agony with the tie result.Todd Pence wrote:I dissent with the opinions above, I hate tie games and want to do whatever possible to eliminate them.
As a fan, I watch a game to experience the thrill of victory or the agony of defeat. A tie game to me means the game might as well have never been played.
College football with their overtime policy has eliminated tie games since 1995. Although I think there are problems with the college overtime system (it makes it to easy for teams to score, leading to inflated final scores) the fact that they have completely eliminated tie games makes a similar system something to consider.
One way to treat tie games that I've thought about would be to give the game to whichever team has the best W/L pct at the end of the year. For instance, suppose the Packers tie the Bears early in the season. The Packers finish 9-6-1 and the Bears finish 8-7-1. In my proposal, the Packers would earn a 10-6 record and the Bears would finish 8-8.
A much larger concern than the occasional tie game should be the phantom roughing the passer calls against both teams during the game. What a horrible rule.