| Name | School/Conference Plays Per Game | NCAA Division Avg. Plays Per Game | School Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alfred White, C-USA assoc. commissioner | 71.4 | 71.8 (FBS) | Not applicable |
| Todd Berry, Louisiana-Monroe coach | 71.7 | 71.8 (FBS) | 6-6 |
| Troy Calhoun, Air Force coach | 67.6 | 71.8 (FBS) | 2-10 |
| Ken Beazer, Southern Utah AD | 66.5 | 70.5 (FCS) | 8-5 |
| Thomas Yeager, Colonial Athletic Association commissioner | 70.4 | 70.5 (FCS) | Not applicable |
| Robert Nielson, Western Illinois coach | 72.4 | 70.5 (FCS) | 4-8 |
| David Sharp, Ouachita Baptist AD | 75.9 | 71.8 (Division II) | 7-3 |
| Keith Allen, Southwest Baptist coach | 69.2 | 71.8 (Division II) | 1-10 |
| Peter Rossomando, New Haven coach | 62.4 | 71.8 (Division II) | 8-3 |
| Gregory Wallace, Grinnell College AD | 68.5 | 70.6 (Division III) | 2-8 |
| Michael Mattia, Johns Hopkins associate AD | 81.1 | 70.6 (Division III) | 10-1 |
| Brian Surace, Fairleigh Dickinson coach | 69.3 | 70.6 (Division III) | 1-9 |
Doesn't look optimistic to the majority of media, fans, and coaches who have spoken out against this proposed rule. That's not the most disturbing and possibly most infuriating part. The rule must be approved by the Rules Oversight panel in March.
Kevin Scarbinsky lists the members of the NCAA Oversight Panel:
Shelley Appelbaum, senior women's administrator, Michigan State.
Derita Ratcliffe, senior women's administrator, UAB.
Jeff Hurd, commissioner, WAC.
Noreen Morris, commissioner, Northeast Conference.
Lisa Sweany, AD, Armstrong Atlantic State University.
Kristy Bayer, senior women's administrator, Arkansas Tech.
Doug Zipp, AD, Shenandoah University.
Lynn Oberbillig, AD, Smith College.
Sue Lauder, AD, Fitchburg State University.
Now we're back to the Shenandoah reference, along with 3 women's administrators who could decide the fate of whether football will evolve, or if it will be put on ice until the next offensive guru can come up with a scheme that loopholes that lazy and petty rule. Let me say that again, 3 women's administrators could decide if Kevin Sumlin, Gus Malzahn, and Mike Leach can continue the evolution of football or give Nick Saban a victory in what seems to be a clash against time and innovation. You want to talk about fairness in the game. What is fair about these people deciding the fate of faster, innovative offenses? Defenses can evolve too, right? I'm waiting for your answer.